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About This Book
ISBN13: 9780375412912 |
Powells.com Staff Pick
Remarkable in scope and plot, Lunar Park is 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.
Recommended by Georgie, Powells.com
Review-a-Day (What is Review-a-Day?)
"The descriptions of wealthy children are top-shelf Ellis, the ubiquitous celebrity lists of his previous novels replaced by Zoloft-stocked medicine cabinets. But then, for some reason, a ghost story is grafted onto the proceedings....Ellis wants this novel to be about Fathers and Sons. But a 21st-century Turgenev he's not. What we really want is more Teenage Pussy." Gary Shteyngart, Esquire (read the entire Esquire review)
Synopses & Reviews
Publisher Comments:
Then imagine having a second chance ten years later, as the Bret Easton Ellis of this remarkable novel is given, with a wife, children, and suburban sobriety — only to watch this new life shatter beyond recognition in a matter of days. At a fateful Halloween party he glimpses a disturbing (fictional) character driving a car identical to his late father's, his stepdaughter's doll violently "malfunctions," and their house undergoes bizarre transformations both within and without. Connecting these aberrations to graver events — a series of grotesque murders that no longer seem random and the epidemic disappearance of boys his son's age — Ellis struggles to defend his family against this escalating menace even as his wife, their therapists, and the police insist that his apprehensions are rooted instead in substance abuse and egomania.
Lunar Park confounds one expectation after another, passing through comedy and mounting horror, both psychological and supernatural, toward an astonishing resolution — about love and loss, fathers and sons — in what is surely the most powerfully original and deeply moving novel of an extraordinary career.
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About the Author
What Our Readers Are Saying
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Average customer rating based on 3 comments:









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StephenWright, November 27, 2007 (view all comments by StephenWright)
Bret Easton Ellis knows he is an egotistical drug abuser, whose dysfunctional relationship with his now deceased abusive father still leaves him unable to hook up with his own son. His former lover, movie star Jayne Dennis offers him redemption through marriage and jointly raising their eleven years old son Robby, whom Bret barely knows. He agrees and the trio along with Jayne's daughter Sarah sired by another freak settle in the New York suburbs while he works on his next porno shocker, Teenage Pussy.
Bret cannot cope with the three people he shares a home with especially his distant non-communicative son. He returns to his drug and alcoholic past while chasing college student Aimee. That is until the weirdness begins starting with Terby the mechanical bird suddenly like Chucky coming alive ready to harm all. Neighbor boys vanish, e-mail from his dad's ashes arrive, and gruesome murders from out of his novel AMERICAN PSYCHO haunt the town as much as the spirit haunting Ellis's house demands he writes the sobering paranoid truth; hence this novel.
This novel is best for those readers who know Bret Easton Ellis's writing career and "brat pack" days of LESS THAN ZERO in which the author and his cronies symbolize the acceptable excesses of the Reagan Era. The story line lampoons the writer as he stars in an autobiographical fiction in which uses real people that he knew and events to tell his self parody that critiques and criticizes his celebrity status now that he no longer can claim the folly of youthful self indulgence. Terrific biographical fiction just not for everyone as the knowing the "Brat Pack" is a great part of the fun.





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Cheryl Klein, September 4, 2007 (view all comments by Cheryl Klein)
I haven't read any of Bret Easton Ellis' books, but somehow reading a (very) fictionalized account of his life as a best-selling author, ace drug addict, and crappy husband and father was thoroughly compelling. He merges postmodernism and sincerity--and character driven lit fic and horror--without looking like he's trying too hard.





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kalebsmom, September 14, 2006 (view all comments by kalebsmom)
I loved it! I was chilling and intense. It seemed so real in a surreal way. I couldn't put it down because I couldn't wait to see what would happen next in his downward sporal towards complete loss.
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Product Details
- ISBN:
- 9780375412912
- Author:
- Publisher:
- Knopf Publishing Group
- Subject:
- Literary
- Subject:
- Psychological
- Subject:
- Suspense
- Subject:
- Married people
- Subject:
- College teachers
- Subject:
- Horror - General
- Copyright:
- 2005
- Publication Date:
- August 16, 2005
- Binding:
- Hardcover
- Language:
- English
- Pages:
- 320
- Dimensions:
- 9.82x6.66x1.26 in. 1.42 lbs.











