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Chuck Palahniuk’s Stranger Than Fiction Stranger Than Fiction, Chuck Palahniuk. In his second nonfiction
collection, Palahniuk delivers twenty three seemingly incongruent essays on
topics as diverse as a combine demolition derby, the strange trend of castle
building in These essays are loosely
tied together by their strangeness, their honesty, and Palaniuk's
dark humor. He interviews actress Juliette Lewis,
writes of his profound respect for the writings of Amy Hempel,
Mark Richard, and Palahniuk's experiences studying them in Tom Spanbauer's workshop. He meditates on the future of
writing, the spurt in self-publishing and how this could positively affect
the lives of writers. "What's going out is the cathartic transgressive novel," he says. and
admits to his own dabblings in steroids. One of the
funnier essays, and there are many, is "The Lip Enhancement," in
which he wants so badly to have full, pouty lips
(like Brad Pitt) that he uses a device to suck his lips into a fuller shape,
finally realizing that this will only last for a few hours. "The whole
evening would then be a race to get naked and accomplish some lovin' before your parts snapped back to their original
size." These systems are for more than lips, he discovers. "I was
visitor number 921 to the Lip Enhancer website. I was visitor number 500,000
to any of the penis enlargement sites." He defends his preoccupation
thusly: "These are systems you can buy, and use, and write funny silly
essays about and therefore tax-deduct; needless to say, several of these
systems are now in the mail to me."
These essays are “funny
silly” essays at times, and profoundly revealing at other times. Sneaking
into the market just before the release of Palahniuk’s newest novel Haunted, many fans may miss sight of
these essays completely, and that’s a shame. They are well worth reading,
whether one is a fan of Palahniuk’s work or just curious the voice in Tyler Durden’s head. -CL Bledsoe |