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Imperial Bedrooms [Anglais] [Poche]

Bret Easton Ellis
4.5 étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (2 commentaires client)
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Description de l'ouvrage

1 avril 2011 Vintage Contemporaries
Bret Easton Ellis’s debut, Less Than Zero, is one of the signal novels of the last thirty years, and he now follows those infamous teenagers into an even more desperate middle age.

Clay, a successful screenwriter, has returned from New York to Los Angeles to help cast his new movie, and he’s soon drifting through a long-familiar circle. Blair, his former girlfriend, is married to Trent, an influential manager who’s still a bisexual philanderer, and their Beverly Hills parties attract various levels of fame, fortune and power. Then there’s Clay’s childhood friend Julian, a recovering addict, and their old dealer, Rip, face-lifted beyond recognition and seemingly even more sinister than in his notorious past.

But Clay’s own demons emerge once he meets a gorgeous young actress determined to win a role in his movie. And when his life careens completely out of control, he has no choice but to plumb the darkest recesses of his character and come to terms with his proclivity for betrayal.

A genuine literary event.


From the Hardcover edition.

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Descriptions du produit

Extrait

They had made a movie about us. The movie was based on a book written by someone we knew. The book was a simple thing about four weeks in the city we grew up in and for the most part was an accurate portrayal. It was labeled fiction but only a few detailshad been altered and our names weren't changed and there was nothing in it that hadn't happened. For example, there actually had been a screening of a snuff film in that bedroom in Malibu on a January afternoon, and yes, I had walked out onto the deck overlookingthe Pacific where the author tried to console me, assuring me that the screams of the children being tortured were faked, but he was smiling as he said this and I had to turn away. Other examples: my girlfriend had in fact run over a coyote in the canyons belowMulholland, and a Christmas Eve dinner at Chasen's with my family that I had casually complained about to the author was faithfully rendered. And a twelve-year-old girl really had been gang-raped--I was in that room in West Hollywood with the writer, who inthe book noted just a vague reluctance on my part and failed to accurately describe how I had actually felt that night--the desire, the shock, how afraid I was of the writer, a blond and isolated boy whom the girl I was dating had halfway fallen in love with.But the writer would never fully return her love because he was too lost in his own passivity to make the connection she needed from him, and so she had turned to me, but by then it was too late, and because the writer resented that she had turned to me I becamethe handsome and dazed narrator, incapable of love or kindness. That's how I became the damaged party boy who wandered through the wreckage, blood streaming from his nose, asking questions that never required answers. That's how I became the boy who never understoodhow anything worked. That's how I became the boy who wouldn't save a friend. That's how I became the boy who couldn't love the girl.  


The scenes from the novel that hurt the most chronicled my relationship with Blair, especially in a scene near the novel's end when I broke it off with her on a restaurant patio overlooking Sunset Boulevard and where a billboard that read disappear herekept distracting me (the author added that I was wearing sunglasses when I told Blair that I never loved her). I hadn't mentioned that painful afternoon to the author but it appeared verbatim in the book and that's when I stopped talking to Blair and couldn'tlisten to the Elvis Costello songs we knew by heart ("You Little Fool," "Man Out of Time," "Watch Your Step") and yes, she had given me a scarf at a Christmas party, and yes, she had danced over to me mouthing Culture Club's "Do You Really Want to Hurt Me?"and yes, she had called me "a fox," and yes, she found out I had slept with a girl I picked up on a rainy night at the Whisky, and yes, the author had informed her of that. He wasn't, I realized when I read those scenes concerning Blair and myself, close toany of us--except of course to Blair, and really not even to her. He was simply someone who floated through our lives and didn't seem to care how flatly he perceived everyone or that he'd shared our secret failures with the world, showcasing the youthful indifference,the gleaming nihilism, glamorizing the horror of it all.  


But there was no point in being angry with him. When the book was published in the spring of 1985, the author had already left Los Angeles. In 1982 he attended the same small college in New Hampshire that I'd tried to disappear into, and where we had littleor no contact. (There's a chapter in his second novel, which takes place at Camden, where he parodies Clay--just another gesture, another cruel reminder of how he felt about me. Careless and not particularly biting, it was easier to shrug off than anythingin the first book which depicted me as an inarticulate zombie confused by the irony of Randy Newman's "I Love L.A.") Because of his presence I stayed at Camden only one year and then transferred to Brown in 1983 though in the second novel I'm still in New Hampshireduring the fall term of 1985. I told myself it shouldn't bother me, but the success of the first book hovered within my sight lines for an uncomfortably long time. This partly had to do with my wanting to become a writer as well, and that I had wanted to writethat first novel the author had written after I finished reading it--it was my life and he had hijacked it. But I quickly had to accept that I didn't have the talent or the drive. I didn't have the patience. I just wanted to be able to do it. I made a few lame,slashing attempts and realized after graduating from Brown in 1986 that it was never going to happen.  


The only person who expressed any embarrassment or disdain about the novel was Julian Wells--Blair was still in love with the author and didn't care, nor did much of the supporting cast--but Julian did so in a gleefully arrogant manner that verged on excitement,even though the author had exposed not only Julian's heroin addiction but also the fact that he was basically a hustler in debt to a drug dealer (Finn Delaney) and pimped out to men visiting from Manhattan or Chicago or San Francisco in the hotels that linedSunset from Beverly Hills to Silver Lake. Julian, wasted and self-pitying, had told the author everything, and there was something about the book being widely read and costarring Julian that seemed to give Julian some kind of focus that bordered on hope andI think he was secretly pleased with it because Julian had no shame--he only pretended that he did. And Julian was even more excited when the movie version opened in the fall of 1987, just two years after the novel was published.  


I remember my trepidation about the movie began on a warm October night three weeks prior to its theatrical release, in a screening room on the 20th Century Fox lot. I was sitting between Trent Burroughs and Julian, who wasn't clean yet and kept bitinghis nails, squirming in the plush black chair with anticipation. (I saw Blair walk in with Alana and Kim and trailing Rip Millar. I ignored her.) The movie was very different from the book in that there was nothing from the book in the movie. Despite everything--allthe pain I felt, the betrayal--I couldn't help but recognize a truth while sitting in that screening room. In the book everything about me had happened. The book was something I simply couldn't disavow. The book was blunt and had an honesty about it, whereasthe movie was just a beautiful lie. (It was also a bummer: very colorful and busy but also grim and expensive, and it didn't recoup its cost when released that November.) In the movie I was played by an actor who actually looked more like me than the characterthe author portrayed in the book: I wasn't blond, I wasn't tan, and neither was the actor. I also suddenly became the movie's moral compass, spouting AA jargon, castigating everyone's drug use and trying to save Julian. ("I'll sell my car," I warn the actorplaying Julian's dealer. "Whatever it takes.") This was slightly less true of the adaptation of Blair's character, played by a girl who actually seemed like she belonged in our group--jittery, sexually available, easily wounded. Julian became the sentimentalizedversion of himself, acted by a talented, sad-faced clown, who has an affair with Blair and then realizes he has to let her go because I was his best bud. "Be good to her," Julian tells Clay. "She really deserves it." The sheer hypocrisy of this scene must havemade the author blanch. Smiling secretly to myself with perverse satisfaction when the actor delivered that line, I then glanced at Blair in the darkness of the screening room.  


As the movie glided across the giant screen, restlessness began to reverberate in the hushed auditorium. The audience--the book's actual cast--quickly realized what had happened. The reason the movie dropped everything that made the novel real was becausethere was no way the parents who ran the studio would ever expose their children in the same black light the book did. The movie was begging for our sympathy whereas the book didn't give a shit. And attitudes about drugs and sex had shifted quickly from 1985to 1987 (and a regime change at the studio didn't help) so the source material--surprisingly conservative despite its surface immorality--had to be reshaped. The best way to look at the movie was as modern eighties noir--the cinematography was breathtaking--andI sighed as it kept streaming forward, interested in only a few things: the new and gentle details of my parents mildly amused me, as did Blair finding her divorced father with his girlfriend on Christmas Eve instead of with a boy named Jared (Blair's fatherdied of AIDS in 1992 while still married to Blair's mother). But the thing I remember most about that screening in October twenty years ago was the moment Julian grasped my hand that had gone numb on the armrest separating our seats. He did this because inthe book Julian Wells lived but in the movie's new scenario he had to die. He had to be punished for all of his sins. That's what the movie demanded. (Later, as a screenwriter, I learned it's what all movies demanded.) When this scene occurred, in the lastten minutes, Julian looked at me in the darkness, stunned. "I died," he whispered. "They killed me off." I waited a beat before sighing, "But you're still here." Julian turned back to the screen and soon the movie ended, the credits rolling over the palm treesas I (improbably) take Blair back to my college while Roy Orbison wails a song about how life fades away.  


The real Julian Wells didn't die in a cherry-red convertible, overdosing on a highway in Joshua Tree while a choir soared over the sound track. The real Julian Wells was murdered over twenty years later, his body dumped behind an abandoned apartment buildingin Los Feliz after he had been tortured to death at another location. His head was crushed--his face struck with such force that it had partly folded in on itself--and he had been stabbed so brutally that the L.A. coroner's office counted one hundred ...

Revue de presse

“Taut and ultimately terrifying….In six novels, the author has emerged as one of the most gifted and serious novelists working in America today.” —Hari Kunzru, Financial Times
 
“Brutally conceived, and effectively done….There is no doubt that Ellis retains the ability to startle and disquiet.” —Stephen Abell, The Times Literary Supplement
 
“Ellis remains a bold ignorer of literary boundaries.  Imperial Bedrooms is but another unexpected swerve in a wonderfully weird career.” J. Robert Lennon, London Review of Books
 
“Enough talk of [Ellis's] literary genius, let's call him what he really is: a terrific horror writer.  Imperial Bedrooms is an absolute creepfest [and] a festival of panting paranoia.”  —Thomas Conner, Chicago Sun-Times
 
“A profoundly talented—and occasionally even brilliant—writer…Ellis has a fictional territory all his own and, heaven forbid, a mastery there.” —Jeff Simon, Buffalo News
 
“A page-turning read [with] a sneaky subtlety…Holding a mirror to our desires, Ellis shows us how much scarier what we think we want can be when severed from even the possibility of innocence, [employing] noirish staples to lure his reader along while subtly circling back to the older—and more frightening—theme: the dead soul.” —Michael McGregor, The Oregonian
 
“This is the most Chandleresque of Bret’s books, and the most deeply steeped in L.A. noir…As Dante’s hell is circular, so is [Ellis’s] L.A. Everywhere in Imperial Bedrooms there is a sense of time frozen, time collapsed and time rounding back on itself in various diabolical ways…What stays with [the reader] is not so much the concluding note of betrayal and horror as the mournfulness of the book, its eerie sense of stasis: clear skies, vacuum-sealed calm, the BlackBerry flashing on the nightstand in the middle of the night, everywhere the subliminal hum of menace.” —Donna Tartt, Amazon.com
 
“A page-turner…Imperial Bedrooms is a quicker, more controlled fire than its predecessor, and, like a good showman, Ellis has learned to save the best of the novel’s many tricks for last…Devastating…Old age and treachery have served Bret Easton Ellis quite well.” —Foster Kamer, The Village Voice
 
"Arrestingly spare…Imperial Bedrooms will leave you feeling bruised, guarded and a little nervous about noises at night…What you really notice is Ellis's newfound love of noir.  He's reinvigorated and ready to get mysterious and mean…As ever, Ellis's details crystallize into elegant remoteness (and) if this is shallowness, the word needs a new definition." —Joshua Rothkopf, Time Out New York
 
“It’s worth following Ellis down this rabbit hole.” —Sam Kaplan, Philadelphia City Paper
 
“Hypnotic…A haunting vision of disillusionment, 21st-century style.” —People Magazine
 
“This sequel is very much on target…[Ellis] uses the thriller framework to infuse nerve-rending unease into this look at Tinseltown mores, a dissection that also comes nicely weighted with both bleak hilarity and firsthand authorial experience.” —Clark Collis, Entertainment Weekly
 
“Visceral and often harrowing, Ellis delivers a work that matches such career peaks as Lunar Park and the infamous American Psycho…It is remarkable how [he] has tailored the narrative in exactly the same style as the original novel, yet offering an assured and mature voice to chronicle Clay’s nightmarish return to L.A.” —Jorge Carreon, The Examiner
 
“Reading Ellis is a thrilling and strangely voyeuristic experience, [and] you can’t look away.” —Venus Zine
 
“Its dirty charms are indisputable.” —Amy Grace Lloyd, Playboy Magazine
 
“Ellis explores what disillusioned youth looks like twenty-five year later in this brutal sequel to Less Than Zero….The story takes on a creepy noirish bent as it barrels toward a conclusion that reveals the horror that lies at the center of a tortured soul….Though the novel's synchronicity with Zero is sublime, this also works as a stellar stand-alone.” —Publishers Weekly, starred review




From the Hardcover edition.

Détails sur le produit

  • Poche: 176 pages
  • Editeur : Vintage (1 avril 2011)
  • Collection : Vintage Contemporaries
  • ISBN-10: 9780307742285
  • ISBN-13: 978-0307742285
  • ASIN: 0307742288
  • Dimensions du produit: 10,7 x 1 x 17,4 cm
  • Moyenne des commentaires client : 4.5 étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (2 commentaires client)
  • Classement des meilleures ventes d'Amazon: 24.339 en Livres anglais et étrangers (Voir les 100 premiers en Livres anglais et étrangers)
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9 internautes sur 9 ont trouvé ce commentaire utile 
4.0 étoiles sur 5 Les obsessions des années 2000 20 août 2010
Par Lady Lama TOP 500 COMMENTATEURS VOIX VINE™
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Bret Easton Ellis a écrit sept romans. "Imperial Bedrooms" (2010) est la (courte, seulement 169 pages) suite de "Less than Zero" (1985) du même auteur. Ne vous inquiétez pas si vous ne connaissez pas ce dernier livre, je pense que personne ne sera perdu - ou plutôt tout le monde, ce qui fait le charme de ses romans! On croise les personnages qui ont quitté les années 80 pour le bling bling mais aussi l'angoisse des années 2000. Le portrait qu'il dresse des années 2000, à travers ses personnages, est peu flatteur.

Le héros, Clay, est un scénariste vivant entre New-York et Los Angeles (comme Ellis d'ailleurs). Au début du roman il revient à Los Angeles pour participer au casting de son prochain film. C'est l'occasion pour lui de renouer avec de vieux démons, ses ex-amis et son ancienne petite amie, qui ont tous fait carrière dans le cinéma (de producteur à succès à mac pourvoyeur de jeunes actrices sans carrières). Clay ne s'est pas amélioré avec les années. Comme la plupart des héros d'Ellis, il est égocentrique, manipulateur, mysogyne, sadique et j'en passe. Le casting est surtout pour lui l'occasion de débusquer la prochaine fille avec qui il pourrait coucher.

L'histoire est secondaire et plaisante. On se retrouve dans une atmosphère de film noir, entre le "Dahlia Bleu" et le "Dahlia Noir", avec un héros poursuivant une jeune femme, tout en se sentant poursuivi. Le tout se fait sur fond de meurtres mystérieux et de recoupements surprenants.

Dès la première page, on se retrouve en terrain connu, entre une allusion à snuff movie et une autre à un viol en réunion. Cependant contrairement aux autres romans de l'auteur, toutes les scènes sexuelles/sadiques/meurtrières... sont seulement traitées en quelques mots, ce qui n'empêche pas la puissance évocatrice des scènes et permet au roman de respirer et d'aborder d'autres thèmes. Les personnages secondaires n'ont pas changé, toujours jeunes, beaux et inconscients. Mais les héros vieillissent, ils deviennent des quarantenaires s'affichant avec des nymphettes de vingt ans de moins. Pas beaucoup de conversation mais satisfaisantes au lit, et leur permettant de les laisser dans l'illusion d'une adolescence éternelle: "The producer wants to meet someone at the party in Bel Air, it's business in Bel Air, his presence in Bel Air is supposed to prove something about his status, and my eyes wander over to the boys barely old enough to drive swimming in the heated pool, girls in string bikinis and high heels lounging by the Jacuzzi, aime sculptures everywhere, a mosaic of youth, a place you don't really belong anymore".

De nouvelles obsessions arrivent. Au fric des années 80s, on passe à la recherche effrénée de célébrité, parfaitement incarnée par Rain Turner, une jolie actrice ratée qui arrive régulièrement sur le chemin de Clay. On passe aussi de l'échange de cartes de visite glacées et dorées ("American Psycho") à l'échange de vidéos douteuses sur IPhone, via YouTube. Enfin, Clay étant scénariste, c'est l'occasion pour Ellis de faire aussi une auto-analyse de lui-même et de son style.

Le style est toujours formidable, et soutient le lecteur dans la plongée des bas-fonds que remue Ellis. Mais je pense qu'il va falloir que je le relise, d'ici à quelques années, pour être sûre d'avoir compris tous les mécanismes mis en place. Les héros et l'athmosphère étant comme toujours déplaisants, on finit la lecture avec l'envie de se laver les mains.
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5.0 étoiles sur 5 Brilliant 16 août 2010
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Sequel of "Less than zero" (first novel of the author) and one of his best (maybe the best one). Just great and brilliant.
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Amazon.com: 2.9 étoiles sur 5  143 commentaires
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3.0 étoiles sur 5 Mesmerizing But Flawed 5 mai 2010
Par Mr. August - Publié sur Amazon.com
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If you read Less Than Zero, Bret Easton Ellis presents the sequel in a sharp, enthralling short novel. If you didn't read Less Than Zero it's OK, you will be introduced to the same characters but they are now adults. Set in Hollywood, Easton assures us that the movie industry scene has not changed. Narrated in a present tense stream of consciousness, Clay, our wealthy screenwriter, returns to L.A. during Christmas to supposedly help cast for his movie, The Listeners (The Informers?). He meets up with his old crowd, his good friend, Julian, old lover, Blair and ex-dealer, Rip. These teen-agers have not changed; they simply turned into middle-aged insecure, wandering souls. So it's again a blurry state of what are they really doing, what are they really saying?

The beginning of the story moves slowly and then it hits. As Ellis builds the plot through Clay's haze of alcohol and seduction, the story works itself into a mystery with no boundaries. Easton works his magic through a wannabe starlet, Rain Turner, a beautiful, no-talent actress. Well, she wants to be an actress and will do anything, and I mean anything, to get a callback. Clay who will do anything to get what he wants plays the game and strings her along with promises of a reading. It's not joyful. The sex, the extreme violence and the Hollywood scene are real; any talent or courtesy is strictly bogus. Ellis teaches us that Hollywood equals conspicuous consumption. The behavior of Clay and his crowd demands overindulgence in alcohol and ambition. Clay's drinking is evident in almost every scene, whether it is fantasy, reality or the devil. But the meaning is hard to capture and at some point toward the last 50 pages, I stopped trying. If I have to work too hard to decipher the meaning, maybe the timing of a character's epiphany is not meaningful.

I read the book in two sittings - I wanted to see where Ellis was going and the end of the book is shocking in its violence and denouement. He is a genuine writer with original ideas, and I have not read anyone who can match his style. His run-on sentences were often annoying and over the top, but his ability to set a tone is unmatched.
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3.0 étoiles sur 5 When Indifference Has Turned To Cruelty--Older, But No Wiser 10 mai 2010
Par K. Harris - Publié sur Amazon.com
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I was a bit surprised to hear Bret Easton Ellis had chosen to revisit the characters first introduced 25 years ago in "Less Than Zero." It is, after all, one of the more quintessential novels about disaffected teens to have come out of the eighties. So specific to time, place, and subculture--"Less than Zero" presented a mind numbing odyssey through the soulless wasteland of LA's over-privileged youth populated by indifference, unrepentant drug use, and meaningless sexual encounters. Capturing the ennui of kids with too much money and too much freedom, "Zero" was more of an experience than anything else, and I think it's fair to say that it polarized its audience with Ellis's stark depiction of moral bankruptcy.

So, to say the least, I was intrigued to see where Ellis might pick up his narrative in "Imperial Bedrooms." The introduction is an absolute delight--a playful riff on the prior novel, its true author, and the movie made from the account. It's a wicked send-up blurring the line between fact and fiction for those who read the initial novel and saw the subsequent, and much maligned, film version. But after the zippy intro, there is a shift in tone more in keeping with expectations. We're reintroduced to the principles of "Less Than Zero" led by Clay (now a successful film writer) returning to his Hollywood home. And while I didn't expect the characters to be unrecognizable, it would have been nice to see some sign of humanity in anyone two decades later. If anything, their indifference has turned to cruelty.

"Imperial Bedrooms" does a nice job of recapturing some of the flavor of "Zero"--however, its sense of story is a lot stronger. This might be welcome to some readers put off by "Zero's" meanderings or loathed by others for its far-fetched contrivance. Much more plot-driven, "Bedrooms" is "Zero" refashioned into a neo-noir piece--replete with mystery, murder, blackmail, and manipulation. My problem with "Imperial Bedrooms" is its complete lack of anyone to root for. While "Less Than Zero" was content to set a mood, "Imperial Bedrooms" story elements beg for a protagonist with at least a few redeeming features. Ultimately, it seems like unpleasantness for the sake of unpleasantness. The kids you may remember are certainly older, but absolutely no wiser. Not a one. And it's a disappointment. A small amount of redemption, or hope even, might have balanced the unsavory aspects of "Imperial Bedrooms." The lack of any depth or character development makes me wonder what the point of Ellis's new enterprise is. KGHarris, 5/10.
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3.0 étoiles sur 5 Sam Spade and the Self-Indulgent Sequel 4 avril 2011
Par Vivien Weimar - Publié sur Amazon.com
Format:Relié|Achat authentifié par Amazon
Brat pack `80s literary bad boy, Bret Easton Ellis is back. Following his familiar characters through the city of angels, Ellis' latest novel, Imperial Bedrooms, is a sequel-of-sorts to Less Than Zero. Set twenty-five years we revisit Clay, Blair and lovable junkie Julian, now in their mid-forties. Adopting L.A.'s narcissistic ennui to hard-boiled detective fiction genre, Ellis' clever choice of modern day Los Angeles turns out to be a perfect setting for a Chandler-esque thriller. Always a master of tight dialogue that both say so much and nothing at all, Ellis' prose lends well to his purpose. However, for all his Marlowe-inspired moves, Imperial Bedrooms falls short of the mark when Ellis' gets too wrapped up in his own fictional tricks. In the end, Ellis' tale of Sam Spade in land of the superficial comes across more self-indulgent than satisfying.

The book begins with two quotes: One from Raymond Chandler as well as a Elvis Costello lyric on the nature of repeating the "old conceits, glib replies and same defeats" in life. Perhaps a prophetic combination of what works (the Chandler aspects) and what doesn't (the repeated self-reference) of this novel as a whole. The latter is an especially telling quote for not only a sequel with little character development in two decades, but also for an extremely ironic, self-referential author. Like Less Than Zero, this new tale is narrated by Clay, who begins by telling the audience about a book that was made about his and his friends' lives that was then made into film. Right from the outset there are two typical Ellis stylistic at work: the continual re-use of his novel's characters as well as his intentional blurring between fact and fiction.

At times, Ellis' own voice bleeds through his narrative, in his (accurate) critique of the movie version of Less Than Zero, as well as the movie's decision to casting Clay as the moral center of the story. It is almost as if Imperial Bedrooms was created just to nullify any truths or re-writes to Ellis' original characters. In fact, Clay's turn from being the seemingly innocent victim of the story to perhaps the most malicious killer of the bunch, feels slightly forced.

While his digs can be distracting, Ellis is at his best when he keeps to the elements of good noir fiction. The protagonist at work in the menacing city streets of Los Angeles; short, staccato-like dialogue; real bar, restaurant and street names; and our hero's exacerbated drinking and sexual exchanges with aspiring actresses. The feeling that Clay is continually being watched and danger lies all around him. No one is really `good' in this world; everyone is on the make. Where `40s noir might have including petty gangsters, Imperial Bedrooms implores a small time escort service that everyone seems to be involved in and the plot is advanced through sexual relations.

Yet for all his exalting characteristics of hard-boiled noir, it is a fine line between homage and satire and toward the end of the novel Ellis tips his hand. When it becomes apparent that Clay may be directly involved in the gruesome murders, the novel starts to unravel. It's when Ellis' characters become more like caricatures of his previous novels that this book ultimately fails. Clays' splatterpunk dream sequence, reminiscent of Ellis' American Psycho, doesn't appear to fit within the plot and the carefully crafted suspense built on unlikable characters is severed. Combined with the unfulfilling ending, this novel leaves the reader feeling slightly conned. Ellis' cocksure Clay comes off too indifferent and self-involved to be a modern day Philip Marlowe. For all its impressive similarities to American hard-boiled fiction, Imperial Bedrooms remains slightly undercooked
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