Bret Easton Ellis Does an Awfully Good Impression of Himself Dave Weich, Powells.com
In 1985, twenty-one-year-old Bret Easton Ellis published Less
than Zero. Written while he was still at college, the searing debut
earned rapturous praise, including head-turning comparisons to Salinger, Fitzgerald,
and Fellini.  Six years, two books, and countless tabloid appearances later, Ellis served up
American Psycho. The shocking story of fictional serial killer Patrick Bateman firmly divided
literary camps in two: Simon and Schuster refused to publish the novel, forfeiting
a six-figure advance; Fay Weldon, meanwhile, writing in the Washington Post,
called it "a beautifully controlled, careful, important novel...a seminal book."
Now Ellis's first novel in seven years takes aim at no less a target than
the author's own public persona. Lunar
Park grafts the black humor of his nineties work onto an intoxicating, pseudo-autobiographical
plot that will send readers scurrying hungrily from its pages in search
of source material to divine fact from fiction.
Lunar Park is "remarkable in scope and plot," Georgie Lewis applauds,
"an almost masochistic metafiction in which the author plays himself as a suburban
dad paying gruesome penance for being Bret Easton Ellis. Always controversial,
as much loved as despised, Ellis has matured here and the result is gothic and
sublime."
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"His fifth and most enjoyable novel....As fascinating as a car wreck and...frequently very funny....Even his harshest critics may now have to acknowledge that this versatile, resourceful writer has formidable skills." Kirkus Reviews (Starred Review)
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"The first novel to come along in years that takes on deep and Dostoyevskian themes....[Ellis] is showing older authors where the hands have come to on the clock....He has forced us to look at intolerable material, and so few novelists try for that anymore." Norman Mailer, Vanity Fair
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"One of the most disturbing novels I've read in a long time. It possesses an unnerving air of documentary reality." Michiko Kakutani, The New York Times
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"Gets under the skin of our celebrity culture in a way that is both illuminating and frightening." Michael Shelden, Daily Telegraph (London)
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"Serves to establish Mr. Ellis's reputation further as one of the primary inside sources in upper-middle-class America's continuing investigation of what has happened to its children." The New York Times Book Review
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"With a canny journalist's eye for detail and dialogue, Ellis's storytelling carries the complete lack of sentiment and empathy of a seasoned comic novelist." LA Times
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Suzanne Goin and Teri Gelber
With 132 seasonal recipes, California chef Goin (from one of Ellis's favorite restaurants in L.A.) brings her delectable Sunday suppers into readers' own kitchens.
Dave: I think your press kit was the first I've received that included
negative reviews. There were plenty of good reviews and admiring profiles, too,
but the mix played well in relation to the content of Lunar
Park, which is to say that readers and critics have very strong reactions
to your work.
Bret Easton Ellis: I haven't seen the press kit, but it's cool that they put some negative
reviews in there to give people an idea of just how divisive I am for audiences. I really couldn't tell you why that is. It's nice when the reviews are good,
but when they're negative it doesn't negate the fun that I had writing the book,
or the reasons that I had for writing it. I'm not often bothered by negative
reviews.
I guess I've had to come up with theories as to why people react so strongly.
I see so many books that are much more poorly written than mine, and no one
seems to get too upset about them. It has to do with the material, I think.
And some of it might have to do with a resentment about my career, though it
really shouldn't; I don't sell as many books as a lot of my contemporaries.
Dave: You're certainly not afraid to push buttons.
Ellis: Involuntarily, I guess.
Dave: But in terms of the subjects you write about.
Ellis: But that suggests a calculation on getting a response, and that's
not generally why I'm writing a book. If I wanted to do that I would go into
even more hardcore areas. I don't think I'm anywhere near the stuff Chuck
Palahniuk writes, for instance. He writes some of the most upsetting things
I've ever come across, and yet he's not nearly as reviled.
Maybe it has something to do with the persona of Bret Easton Ellis that was
put out there; that was bothersome to some people. Maybe it was having success
so early that annoyed and bothered people, and made critics and other writers
much more sensitive about my work.
Dave: Did putting yourself at the center of Lunar
Park ratchet up the stakes for you?
Ellis: It completely did, but it wasn't part of the game plan until
really late in the day.
I was going to write about a man who moves into a house that he realizes is
haunted. It was going to be a haunted house book. I wanted to write something
fun. I'd been with Patrick Bateman for three years. Not that American
Psycho wasn't fun to write, but it went into a lot of dark places, and I
was really angry when I wrote that book. That's probably why it works.
At the time, I didn't think I was old enough to write Lunar
ParkI knew that the narrator was married with kids, and they were
all living in this house togetherbut I wanted to write a book that took
me back to the enjoyment I got as a kid reading genre fiction, Stephen
King and Robert
Ludlum, so I thought, Wait a little while. I know Victor Ward better.
I know that scene better. And I was really at the height of my disgust with
celebrity culture, or so I thought at the time. International espionage fiction,
I went with that one first; and Glamorama
took a long time to write.
I wanted to write this book, but the narrator wasn't me in '89 or '95 or '98
or '99. There were a lot of autobiographical elementshe had written
a book like American Psycho;
a character from that book had escaped, quote-unquote, and was wreaking havoc
but it was another guy.
In the summer of 2000, I was stuck, and I didn't understand why. I had about
a thousand pages of outlines when I decided, Okay, it's Bret Easton Ellis.
Don't call him a fictional writer. Name the titles of your books.
In some ways, it's too bad because in the opening pages I had done some funny
parodies of my own work. Those aren't now in the book. I had a lot of fun making
fun of myself through a fictional character, but it felt dishonest, like I was
hiding behind something. The minute I decided to go full-out and make myself
the narrator, I got inspired.
I also thought it was going to help ground some of the more outlandish or
supernatural aspects of the book, make them vaguely more realistic and give
them more of a documentary feel. That would be a big technical plus.
Dave: Much of American
Psycho put me in the mind of Money
by Martin Amis. Both
novels are propelled by what feels more like a flow than a plot; the hooks aren't
as clear as they might be in another novel. Also, in both cases we're dealing
with a narrator we probably can't trust, and someone the reader will have a
hard time liking.
You take that on in pretty much all your work: your narrators are rarely likable.
Ellis: That's true, but I'm not really thinking about the likeability of a character. I'm thinking, Is he interesting to me? Does he sum
up all my feelings about the themes of the book and what I'm trying to do?
The impetus to write the first four books came from a satirical place; the
characters, from Clay [in Less
than Zero] on to Victor Ward [in Glamorama],
the kids in The Rules of
Attraction and even Patrick Bateman, were summations of everything I didn't
like about whatever I was satirizing at the time, whether it was youth culture,
the college experience, the eighties, the nineties...
Those books came from a place of anger and frustration. I was disgusted with
society and I was going to share my disgust. That was not the case with Lunar
Park. It's not a satirical novel. There's some light satire in there about
living in the suburbs and about modern parenting, but basically it was going
to be a ghost story. And it was about dealing with my father's death.
That doesn't absolve the narrator of Lunar
Park from being a mess. He's someone it takes a long time to warm up to,
if readers warm up to him at all. Who wrote this in a review?someone called
the Bret Easton Ellis character in Lunar Park "an endearing dufus."
But there's a part of everyone I've written about that I like, even Patrick
Batemanand more when I reread the book in '03. I thought his anger was
justified; I thought his misery was justified; I thought the implied criticism
of the society he was around was valid; and I was amazed on my second reading
of the book since its publication to find him at times a sympathetic guy that
I could connect with. But I've always thought that as long as narrators are
interesting, likeability is not an issue.
Dave: When Glamorama
was published, Rolling Stone said, "The real bleakness in [your] books
doesn't so much derive from the terrible things that sometimes happen as from
the way nothing seems to matter more than anything else."
That's incisive, and it speaks to the fact that some readers don't make a
distinction between the characters or events and the authorial perspective.
Parts of American Psycho
are hilarious. The other day I was giving a play-by-play of the scene in the
Chinese laundry.
Ellis: But a lot of people don't read books that way, I found out,
and there's really nothing you can do about it. You can't stand over every reader,
saying, "See this part here? That's supposed to be funny. You're not supposed
to be so grossed out or so offended by it..."
I always thought the tonal qualities were humorous in nature, even though
horrible things happen. And ultimately the horror does overwhelm in every instance,
but I do think most of the books start out funny.
Dave: How can you not laugh at Victor? He's so over the top.
Ellis: Completely. It is so over the top. But, actually, if
you've hung out with people like that...
Victor is probably the least like me of any of my characters, but I fell for
him also. I sympathized with him, even though he could be a raging moron and
an asshole. Ultimately, I thought he became a sympathetic character. Everyone
else moved on or died. I thought he learned something about himself at the end
of that book.
Dave: Are there other books about cocaine culture that you would recommend?
Ellis: Those really aren't the books that I like to read. Drug books
usually don't interest me because they tend to get lost in their own drugginess.
Everyone always referred to Less
than Zero as a drug book; I didn't ever see it that way. The characters
did a lot of drugs, but personally I've never been interested in exploring drugs
and what drugs mean.
Dave: Which distinguishes your novels and the culture you inhabited
from some that came before, the counterculture of the sixties, for instance. Drugs for you weren't about expanding consciousness. They
were about having fun.
Ellis: It was purely social. I wasn't making a statement. I wasn't
learning anything, which was fine with me. I made a lot of friends and had a
lot of good times, but there's a moment when the party stops. It's different
for everybody, but eventually it's not so fun anymore. There have been a couple
casualties along the way. You get older, and it takes longer to recover. It's
not a big loss.
Dave: A lot of authors say that they write what they like to read.
Ellis: I definitely write the book that I want to read, but that doesn't
necessarily mean that I like writers who write like me or write about the same
subject or have the same stylistic approach. I like all kinds of books. I can
name dozens of writers and dozens of books that I've read recently and loved,
but none of them have anything to do with my work.
I can see the connections between the first half of this book and Philip
Roth. I was reading a lot of his work, and I began channeling him, especially
in those long, self-lacerating paragraphs. And there are all the Stephen
King references in the second half of the book. Those were two writers I
liked that influenced this particular novel.
When I was writing Glamorama,
I was at the height of my passion for Don
DeLillo; he was definitely an inspiration. I dug his work. (People no longer
say thatthat's such an anachronistic word: dug.)
The books I like most from my generation of writers are The
Corrections, Kavalier
and Clay, Fortress of
Solitude... None of those shares a lot in common with what I do.
Probably my two greatest reading experiences of last year were Middlemarch,
for the first time, and The
Great Gatsby, finally understanding why it's the best American novel. It
took me until forty to understand the horror of that book.
Dave: Why do you think that is?
Ellis: You have to have lost a lot, I think, to tap into that book
emotionally. And you have to firmly grasp how money shapes everything
that's really at the heart of it. When they pass that book out to fourteen-year-olds
in high school, I don't know what they're thinking. Because I wanted to be a
writer, I admired the book, and there were passages that were very beautiful.
I thought it was a good story. And I thought, I'm kind of rooting for Nick,
and Tom's an asshole, and Daisy is such a sweet woman.
My God, they're all murderers! At forty, they're all murderers. There's a
pile of bodies at the end of that book a mile high. It's a horror story. It's
so bleak, so dark. I didn't grasp it even at thirty-two when I reread it, definitely
not in my twenties when I reread it a couple times, and certainly not in high
school.
Dave: Going to Bennington turned out to be such an important decision
for you. Where else did you apply? Did you have a notion in mind of the college
experience you were seeking?
Ellis: I was not a good student in high school. I was only interested
in reading books and writing, and I liked to play music. I was in bands. That
was my life. I ignored everything else, which is why I ended up with one of
the lowest GPAs in my high school.
Dad, with some connections, could have gotten me into USC. That's about it.
But I wanted to go to a liberal arts school, someplace where you didn't need
a GPA and they really didn't care so much about your SAT scores, where they
only cared about what you were interested in doing and exploring and how they
could help you fulfill those needs. So it was the usual route a lot of kids
go through: Hampshire, Sarah Lawrence...
But I knew right away that Bennington was the right place. It had a really
strong writing program, as well as a strong music programI wasn't sure
if I was going to be a writing major or a music major. The campus was beautiful,
and I liked the kids I met when I went there to look at the school. Bennington's
motto was Learn by doing. You set up your own curriculum; they leave
you alone. You have to have a lot of faith in your work, which is why I think
Bennington has the highest attrition rate in the country; something like fifty
percent of the freshman class leaves by the end of sophomore year. The kids
who stay want to paint or become musicians or dancers or poets. They have a
passion. It might not work outit didn't work out for a lot of people
but the choice was not hard to make. I don't see any luck or fate in
the decision. I looked around, I saw that place, and I wanted to go.
I definitely didn't plan to publish a novel at twenty-one. That was not in
the cards. I thought the band I was in might go on tour after I graduated, but
I hadn't thought about publishing a book. The luck-out was finally getting the
nerve to give a certain professor there some of my writing samples, even though
he was only teaching seniors and juniors, and I was a freshman. That took more
guts than I normally had. From there, everything started playing itself out,
and then a lot of luck and a lot of fate started to play a role in what happened
to me.
Dave: What is Gary Fisketjon's most useful talent as an editor?
Ellis: Honesty. And, when it comes to the book itself, a bad bedside
manner, which is really useful. A lot of editors are too afraid of the writer
and let the writer get off track sometimes.
I published three books without Gary, and I've published three books now with
him. Ultimately, I'm not one of those writers who'll turn in a manuscript and
say, "The last hundred pages are a mess. Can you help me?" You'd be surprised;
there are a lot of those out there.
I present what I think is the publishable manuscript. I want some grammar
help and some line-editing here and there. If the book is fine, an editor's
main job is to be a big supporter of the book in pushing it through all the
different levels in a house and even beyond that, once it's on the street. Gary
is very good at that. Very good. I hear horror stories from writers all the
time who feel that their books were just tossed out there, and they had no one
checking everything out, sending them emails, telling them about this or that.
Gary loves his job. He's not going to go anywhere else. That's vital. But he's
a tree editor; he's not a forest editor.
Dave: What's your favorite restaurant of the moment?
Ellis: I've got two. One is called Sona, and the other is a place called
Lucques. Those are the two places I like best when I'm in L.A.
Dave: Reading American
Psycho and to a lesser extent Glamorama,
I couldn't help wondering how you know so much about fancy clothes.
Ellis: Research. I don't like clothes. I wrote two novels, one around
the fashion industry and one around clothes whores, and it was all research.
It was looking through GQ and seeing what the guys on Wall Street were
wearing, since every other pictorial during those two years had guys hanging
out in front of various office buildings downtown.
Also, what a lot of people don't realize, and what I had a lot of fun with,
is that if you really saw the outfits Patrick Bateman describes, they'd look
totally ridiculous. He would describe a certain kind of vest with a pair of
pants and certain kind of shirt, and you think, He really must know so much,
but if you actually saw people dressed like this, they would look like clowns.
It was a subtle joke. If
you read it on a surface level and know nothing about clothes, you read American
Psycho and think, My God, we're in some sort of princely kingdom where
everyone just walked out of GQ. No. They look like fools. They look like
court jesters, most of them.
Bret Easton Ellis visited Powell's City of Books on September 7, 2005. Though
well dressed, he was not wearing especially fancy clothes.
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