In the pantheon of transgressive 1980s literature, few novels capture the hollow sheen of American privilege, hedonism, and existential despair quite like Bret Easton Ellis’s . Published in 1987, the novel serves as a spiritual predecessor to his later, more notorious work, American Psycho , sharing a character (the sociopathic Sean Bateman, brother of Patrick) and a universe of detached, wealthy youth.
The Rules Of Attraction By Bret Easton Ellispdf: ^new^
In the pantheon of transgressive 1980s literature, few novels capture the hollow sheen of American privilege, hedonism, and existential despair quite like Bret Easton Ellis’s . Published in 1987, the novel serves as a spiritual predecessor to his later, more notorious work, American Psycho , sharing a character (the sociopathic Sean Bateman, brother of Patrick) and a universe of detached, wealthy youth.