Discount Book Store - Rbookshop.comOnline Book StoreBusiness BooksComputer BooksEngineering BooksMathematics BooksScience BooksView All Categoriesnavmap
arrow Search for books at ARC Spider:
arrow Search for books at Powells:
arrow
Buy a Book from Amazon.com
bar
How to buy? - A step-by-step guide

Book Categories


Rant: An Oral Biography of Buster Casey

Buy Rant: An Oral Biography of Buster Casey here, one of many Firewalls books offered for sale at discount prices here at Rbookshop.com.  We greatly appreciate your patronage at Rbookshop and look forward to offering you great products and prices now and in the future.
You Are Here:  Home > Computer Books > Firewalls > Item 290

View Previous Product in our Firewalls Store      View Next Product in our Firewalls Store

Click here to buy Rant: An Oral Biography of Buster Casey by  Chuck Palahniuk. Rant: An Oral Biography of Buster Casey
by Chuck Palahniuk
Sales Rank: 12379
3.5 out of 5 stars
$16.47
At Amazon
on 11-15-2008.
Buy Rant: An Oral Biography of Buster Casey now! Get Info on Rant: An Oral Biography of Buster Casey
Features
  • Cover Type: Hard Cover with 336 pages
  • Published by: Doubleday May 1, 2007
  • Written in: English
  • ISBN 10 Number: 0385517874
  • ISBN 13 Number: 978-0385517874
  • Book Dimensions: 8.4 x 5.9 x 1.2 inches
  • Weighs: 1 pounds

From Publishers Weekly
Buster Casey, destined to live fast, die young and murder as many people as he can, is the rotten seed at the core of Palahniuk's comically nasty eighth novel (after Haunted; Lullaby; Diary; etc.). Set in a future where urbanites are segregated by strict curfews into Daytimers and Nighttimers, the narrative unfolds as an oral history comprising contradictory accounts from people who knew Buster. These include childhood friends horrified by the boy's macabre behavior (getting snakes, scorpions and spiders to bite him and induce instant erections; repeatedly infecting himself with rabies), policemen and doctors who had dealings with the rabies "superspreader"; and Party Crashers, thrill-seeking Nighttimers who turn city streets into demolition derby arenas. After liberally infecting his hometown peers with rabies, Buster hits the big city and takes up with the Party Crashers. A series of deaths lead to a police investigation of Buster (long-since known as "Rant"—the sound children make while vomiting) that peaks just as Buster apparently commits suicide in a blaze of car-crash glory. This dark religious parable (there's even a resurrection) from the master of grotesque excess may not attract new readers, but it will delight old ones. (May)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Bookmarks Magazine
Zombies, government conspiracies, religious epiphanies, time travel, a postmodern Typhoid Mary, and a lady who mixes thumbtacks into her cookie dough—all are fair game in Rant, Chuck Palahniuk's eighth novel. Critics agreed that Rant is vintage Palahniuk, a grim thriller ride filled with his signature black humor, withering social commentary, and stomach-churning details. Some grumbled, however, that the ideas in Rant have been recycled from previous novels, particularly Fight Club. They were also disappointed with the novel's lack of depth, distracting structure (a succession of hundreds of brief eyewitness testimonies), and underlying glorification of violence. The truth is that Palahniuk is an acquired taste. Readers either love him or leave him alone, and will judge Rant accordingly.

Copyright © 2004 Phillips & Nelson Media, Inc.

Reader Reviews
I've heard it said that there are no new ideas left in the world. The proliferation of movie remakes, regurgitated pop music, and Danielle Steele novels certainly add to this argument. Even in "Rant," Palahniuk's latest novel, you won't see anything that hasn't already been covered by Sartre, Camus, or The Terminator. The thing about Palahniuk (and other brilliant writers like David Mitchell, Craig Clevenger, and Jonathan Lethem) is that while the message may not be all that new, the manner in which it is told is nothing short of stunning. If you're paying close enough attention, Palahniuk gives away almost the entire story in the first four pages, and he drops plenty of hints along the way for those who still haven't caught on. "Rant" is about, alternately, an underground cult of car crashers, a rabies epidemic, the true essence of religion, and a guy named Buster Casey who is addicted to spider bites. Like his other novels, Palahniuk employs an encyclopedic knowledge of the macabre. His spare, punching prose ties together a medley of ideas and facts until what you're left with is a dizzying collage that is so kaleidoscopic, it'll probably take you three reads just to get half of what he's saying. And he says a lot, in spite of the low page count. Some of "Rant," in fact, might feel rewarmed to the hardcore Palahniuk fan. A character named Echo Lawrence makes her money by exploiting the same weaknesses manipulated by Choke's Victor Mancini. Buster's physical immolations recall Shannon McFarland's reality-enhancing disfigurement from Invisible Monsters. And the whole idea of Party Crashing (an underground cult of Nighttimers who get their kicks by intentionally hunting down and wrecking into each other) is an obvious off-shoot of Fight Club's nihilistic pugilism (an observation that is actually made by Palahniuk himself, three-quarters through the book). While those past books were great in their own ways (although "Choke" was a bit more mainstream than usual), they were also all pretty single-minded of purpose. In "Rant," Palahniuk's blistering pen stabs into several themes -- population control, theistic iconography, segregation, and (of course) life as a diversion from reality, the theft of existence by a society that is happier with blunted and denuded entertainments than with the raw, sometimes poisonous, bite of true, fully aware experience. Most Eastern philosophies are all about achieving true consciousness through an elevation of the mind; Palahniuk wants the same thing, but his methods of transcendence involve far more noise, chaos, and pain. If it sounds confusing, it is, but the real brilliance (and -- believe it or not -- beauty) of "Rant" is how all of these themes dissolve into one another. There is no clutter here, in spite of the density of the words. The fact that the book is arranged in the form of an oral biography -- told exclusively through snippets of interviews and recorded information -- only adds to the story's web-like framework, highlights each dark, glistening strand. "Rant" is a lot of things. It is part Strange Days, part Perfume, and part Cronenberg's Crash. It is half a condemnation of a spirit-deadening world, and half a celebration of it. It's morbid, grotesque, unsettling, evocative, and sometimes just plain hilarious. It's Palahniuk. What more can I say?


Back To Top

View Previous Product in our Firewalls Store      View Next Product in our Firewalls Store

Rant: An Oral Biography of Buster Casey
List Price: $24.95
Available from Amazon
Price: $16.47
Updated on 11-15-2008.
Buy Rant: An Oral Biography of Buster Casey now! Get Info on Rant: An Oral Biography of Buster Casey




NOTICE: All prices, availability, and specifications
are subject to verification by their respective retailers.




We offer Rant: An Oral Biography of Buster Casey and other related Firewalls Books here at Rbookshop.com. To view more books about Firewalls please use the previous and next buttons near the top of this page.




Alternative Med Books | Art Books | Business Books | Comic Books | Computer Books | Cook Books | Engineering Books | History Books | Hobby Books | Law Books | Mathematics Books | Medical Books | Popular Authors | Rare Books | Religion Books | Romance Books | Science Books | Science Fiction Books | Sports Books | Travel Books | Unusual Subjects Books
Discount Book Store
Rbookshop

Copyright © 2008, dvddispatcher.com

124460 Computer Books Online and Available as of 11-15-2008.