Deliver Me to Freedom - An Existential Review of Fight Club
"May I never be complete. May I never be content. May I never be perfect. Deliver me, Tyler, from being perfect and complete. Tyler and I agreed to meet at a bar." (46)
Like most people, I watched the movie Fight Club long before I read the book. As it is one of my all time favorite movies, I was really curious to find out about the book by Chuck Palahniuk that it is based on. The biggest difference
by Matt Dubois
Having seen the movie, Fight Club, I was slightly disappointed reading the book, not because the movie was better in any way, but because, having seen it, so many of the book's secrets that are integral to attaining its full
by M.L. Brooke
Book Review: Fight Club
Chuck's most (in)famous work to date, was written in angst towards his publisher and the feeling is pumped through the veins of every page. After offering up "Invisible Monsters" to them and being initially
Fight Club is a novel written by Chuck Palahniuk. It is about an extremely bored office worker who meets an eccentric soap salesman and they become fast friends. They begin fighting each other as a form of release therapy. The
As usual, the book is always better than the movie and Chuck Palaniuk's Fight Club is no exception. In this dark satire, a disgruntled young man, vexed by his mundane life and job, befriends Tyler Durdan, a movie projectionist