Coordinates | 38°36′″N27°04′″N |
---|---|
name | Bret Easton Ellis |
birth date | March 07, 1964 |
birth place | Los Angeles, California |
occupation | novelist |
genre | Satire |
movement | Postmodern, Transgressive |
influences | Ernest Hemingway, F. Scott Fitzgerald, William Faulkner, Don DeLillo, Joan Didion, James Joyce, Gustave Flaubert, Honoré de Balzac, Truman Capote, Stephen King (with regard to ''Lunar Park''), Raymond Chandler (with regard to ''Imperial Bedrooms'') |
influenced | Michel Houellebecq, Chuck Palahniuk, Joe McGinniss Jr. |
website | http://www.breteastonellis.com/ }} |
Bret Easton Ellis (born March 7, 1964 in Los Angeles, California) is an American novelist and short story writer. His works have been translated into 27 different languages. He was regarded as one of the so-called literary Brat Pack, which also included Tama Janowitz and Jay McInerney. He is a self-proclaimed satirist, whose trademark technique, as a writer, is the expression of extreme acts and opinions in an affectless style. Ellis employs a technique of linking novels with common, recurring characters.
Though Ellis made his debut at 21 with the controversial 1985 bestseller ''Less Than Zero'', a zeitgeist novel about amoral young people in Los Angeles, the work he is most known for is his third novel, 1991's ''American Psycho''. On its release, the literary establishment widely condemned the novel as overly violent and misogynist; though many petitions to ban the book saw Ellis dropped by Simon & Schuster, the resounding controversy made it a paperback bestseller for Alfred A. Knopf later that year. Four of Ellis' works have been made into films; notably, ''Less Than Zero'' was rapidly adapted for screen, and a starkly different ''Less Than Zero'' film was released in 1987, and Mary Harron's adaptation of ''American Psycho'' was released to predominantly positive reviews in 2000. In later years, Ellis' novels have become increasingly metafictional. 2005's ''Lunar Park'', a pseudo-memoir and ghost story, received positive reviews, and 2010's ''Imperial Bedrooms'', marketed as a sequel to ''Less Than Zero'', continues in this vein.
His collection of short stories, ''The Informers'', was published in 1994. It contains vignettes of wayward Los Angeles characters ranging from rock stars to vampires, mostly written while Ellis was in college, and so has more in common with the style of ''Less Than Zero''. Ellis has said that the stories in ''The Informers'' were collected and released only to fulfill a contractual obligation after discovering that it would take far longer to complete his next novel than he'd intended. After years of struggling with it, Ellis released his fourth novel ''Glamorama'' in 1998. ''Glamorama'' is set in the world of high fashion, following a male model who becomes entangled in a bizarre terrorist organization composed entirely of other models. The book plays with themes of media, celebrity, and political violence, and like its predecessor ''American Psycho'' it uses surrealism to convey a sense of postmodern dread. Ellis's novel ''Lunar Park'' (2005), uses the form of a celebrity memoir to tell a ghost story about the novelist "Bret Easton Ellis" and his chilling experiences in the apparently haunted home he shares with his wife and son. In keeping with his usual style, Ellis mixes absurd comedy with a bleak and violent vision. ''Imperial Bedrooms'' (2010) follows the characters of ''Less Than Zero'' 25 years later; it combines the violence of ''American Psycho'' and the postmodernity of ''Lunar Park'' with the unaltered ennui of Ellis' debut novel.
Later, Ellis was approached by young screenwriter Nicholas Jarecki to adapt ''The Informers'' into a film; the script they co-wrote was cut from 150 to 94 pages and taken from Jarecki to give to Australian director Gregor Jordan, whose light-on-humor vision of the film was met with unanimously negative reviews when the film was released in 2009. Despite setbacks as a screenwriter, Ellis teamed up with acclaimed director Gus Van Sant in 2009 to adapt the ''Vanity Fair'' article "The Golden Suicides" into a film of the same name, depicting the paranoid final days and suicides of celebrity artists Theresa Duncan and Jeremy Blake. In 2010, Ellis released the sequel to his debut novel, in the form of ''Imperial Bedrooms''. Ellis wrote it following his own return to LA and fictionalises his work on the film adaptation of ''The Informers'', from the perspective of Clay. Positive reviews felt it was a culmination of the themes began respectively in ''Less Than Zero'', ''American Psycho'' and ''Lunar Park''. Negative reviews noted the novel's rehashed themes and listless writing.
In his semi-autobiographical novel ''Lunar Park'', the fictional Bret continues both transient affairs and long-term relationships with men and women at various points in the novel. ''Lunar Park'' was dedicated to his lover, Michael Wade Kaplan, and Ellis's father, Robert Ellis, about whom he speaks openly in interviews promoting the novel. Robert Ellis died in 1992. In one interview, Ellis describes feeling a liberation, in the completion of the novel, that allowed him to come to terms with unresolved issues regarding his father. In the "author Q&A;" for ''Lunar Park'' on the Random House website, Ellis comments on his relationship with his father, and says he feels that his father was a "tough case" who left him damaged. Having grown older and having "mellow[ed] out", Ellis describes how his opinion of his father changed since 15 years ago when writing ''Glamorama'' (in which the central conspiracy concerns the relationship of a father and son). Even earlier in his career, Ellis based the character of Patrick Bateman from ''American Psycho'' on his father. In a 2010 interview, however, he claims to have "lied" about this explanation. Explaining that "Patrick Bateman was about me", he confesses "I didn’t want to finally own up to the responsibility of being Patrick Bateman, so I laid it on my father, I laid it on Wall Street." In reality, the book had been "about me at the time, and I wrote about all my rage and feelings". To James Brown, he clarified Bateman was based on "My father a little bit but I was living that lifestyle, my father wasn’t in New York the same age as Patrick Bateman, living in the same building, going to the same places that Patrick Bateman was going to".
Camden is introduced in ''Less Than Zero'', where it is mentioned that both protagonist Clay and minor character Daniel attend it. In ''The Rules of Attraction'' (1987), where Camden is the setting, Clay (referred to as "The Guy from L.A." before being properly introduced) is a minor character who narrates one chapter; ironically, he longs for the Californian beach, where in Ellis' previous novel he had longed to return to college. On "the guy from L.A.'s door someone wrote "Rest In Peace Called"; R.I.P., or Rip, is Clay's dealer in ''Less Than Zero''; Clay also says that Blair from ''Less than Zero'' sent him a letter saying she thinks Rip was murdered. Main character Sean Bateman's older brother Patrick narrates one chapter of the novel; he will be the infamous central character of Ellis' next novel, ''American Psycho''. Ellis includes a reference to Tartt's forthcoming ''Secret History'' in the form of a passing mention of "that weird Classics group... probably roaming the countryside sacrificing farmers and performing pagan rituals". There is also an allusion to the main character from Eidenstadt's ''From Rockaway.''
In ''American Psycho'' (1991), Patrick's brother Sean appears briefly. Paul Denton and Victor Johnson from ''The Rules of Attraction'' are both mentioned; on seeing Paul, Patrick wonders if "maybe he was on that cruise a long time ago, one night last March. If that's the case, I'm thinking, I should get his telephone number or, better yet, his address." Camden is referred to as both Sean's college and the college a minor character named Vanden is going to. Vanden was referred to (but never appeared) in both ''Less Than Zero'' and ''The Rules of Attraction''. Passages from "Less Than Zero" reappear, almost verbatim, here, with Patrick replacing Clay as narrator. Patrick also makes repeated references to Jami Gertz, the actress who portrays Blair in the 1987 film adaptation of ''Less Than Zero''. Allison Poole from Jay McInerney's 1988 novel ''Story of My Life'' appears as a torture victim of Patrick's. 1994's ''The Informers'' features a much-younger Timothy Price, one of Patrick's co-workers in ''American Psycho'', who narrates one chapter. One of the central characters, Graham, buys concert tickets from ''Less Than Zero''s Julian, and his sister Susan goes on to say that Julian sells heroin and is a male prostitute (as shown in ''Zero''). Alana and Blair from ''Zero'' are also friends of Susan's. Letters to Sean Bateman to a Camden College girl named Anne visiting grandparents in LA comprise the eighth chapter.
Patrick Bateman appears briefly in ''Glamorama'' (1998); ''Glamorama'''s main characters Victor Ward and Lauren Hynde were first introduced in ''The Rules of Attraction''. As a in-joke reference to Bateman being portrayed by Christian Bale in the then-in-production 2000 film adaptation, the actor himself briefly appears as a background character. The book also includes a spy called Russell who is physically identical to Bale, and at one point in the novel impersonates him. Jamie Fields, who has a major role in the book, was first briefly mentioned by Victor in ''The Rules of Attraction''. Bertrand, Sean and Mitchell, all from ''The Rules of Attraction'', appear in a Camden flashbacks and several other ''Rules'' characters are referenced. McInerney's Alison Poole makes her second appearance in an Ellis novel as Victor's mistress. ''Lunar Park'' (2005) is not set in the same "universe" as Ellis' other novels, but contains a similar multitude of references and allusions. All the author's previous works are heavily referenced, in keeping with the book-within-a-book structure. Jay McInerney cameos. Donald Kimball from ''American Psycho'' questions Ellis on a series of ''American Psycho''-inspired murders, Mitchell Allen from ''Rules'' lives next door to and went to college with Ellis (Ellis even recalls his affair with Paul Denton, alluded to in ''Rules''), and Ellis recalls a tempestuous relationship with Blair from ''Zero''. ''Imperial Bedrooms'' (2010) establishes the conceit that the Clay depicted in ''Zero'' is not the same Clay who narrates ''Bedrooms''. In the world of ''Imperial Bedrooms'', ''Zero'' was the close-to-non-fiction work of an author friend of Clay's, and its film adaptation (featuring actors James Spader, Jami Gertz and Robert Downey, Jr.) exists within the world of the novel, too.
Category:1964 births Category:American novelists Category:American satirists Category:Bennington College alumni Category:LGBT writers from the United States Category:Living people Category:People from Los Angeles, California Category:Postmodern writers
br:Bret Easton Ellis bg:Брет Истън Елис ca:Bret Easton Ellis da:Bret Easton Ellis de:Bret Easton Ellis es:Bret Easton Ellis fr:Bret Easton Ellis it:Bret Easton Ellis he:ברט איסטון אליס ka:ბრეტ ისტონ ელისი hu:Bret Easton Ellis nl:Bret Easton Ellis ja:ブレット・イーストン・エリス no:Bret Easton Ellis pl:Bret Easton Ellis pt:Bret Easton Ellis ro:Bret Easton Ellis ru:Эллис, Брет Истон sk:Bret Easton Ellis sh:Bret Easton Ellis fi:Bret Easton Ellis sv:Bret Easton Ellis tr:Bret Easton EllisThis text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.
From 1994 - 1996, he managed Irish rock act, the Far Canals. The band released one album If You See K (on Hunter S. Records) before faiding into obscurity. In 2005/2006, Tyaransen lived on the Thai island of Koh Pha Ngan, contributing a Hot Press column called Temporarily Thairish.
In October 2001, Tyaransen visited the Ukraine to report on the phenomenon of internet bridal agencies. The resulting report was published in ''Sex Lines'' (2002). The book featured his reports on British spanking parties and the Hungarian porn industry (Tyaransen reported on the making of the Private hardcore film ''Devil in the Flesh'').
He released ''Palace of Wisdom'' in 2004, a collection of his Hot Press interviews. Interviewees included Allen Ginsberg, Nick Cave, Will Self, William Gibson, Dave Gahan, Gerry Adams, Grace Jones and Howard Marks.
In 2009, he was shortlisted for Journalist of the Year at the Irish Magazine Awards. His fifth book Selected Recordings:2000-2010 - an interview collection - will be published by Hot Press Books on November 22nd, 2010. Interviewees include Johnny Adair, Bono, Courtney Love, Chuck Palahniuk, Larry Flynt and Dolly Parton.
This text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.
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