Like many other women who read this book, I found myself getting faint and queasy, and ended up hurling it across the room in disgust. I couldn't make it to the end. As a female and a feminist, I found the book problematic. Of course, the character of Bateman is supposed to be vile, but his misogyny is so pronounced that I find it hard to simply glom it on with the rest of his misanthropic tics. And unlike the asexual murder of his colleague, these womens' deaths are hyper-sexualized.
They are all committed post-coitally, they are almost all prostitutes. It is heady territory, just waiting to be mined by some iron-willed feminist scholar with the eggs for it, but I am not that woman, and if you don't think you're that woman either, then I would STRONGLY advise avoiding American Psycho. Putting it bluntly: the scenes of women being raped, beaten, tortured and killed in this book are numerous , long, detailed, and presented with an absolute lack of empathy.
For myself, this book made me feel as though I had been sexually assaulted. And while I appreciate the genius of such a book, that doesn't mean I have to like it.
View all comments. Shelves: novels , the-misogyny-series. Well, in one sense they are, but in another sense they aren't.
People who like this book should ask themselves why they want to read pages and pages of descriptions of hacking and chopp another update incorporating comments about BEE's latest novel - apparently he's still at it! People who like this book should ask themselves why they want to read pages and pages of descriptions of hacking and chopping up women with the occasional man thrown in, but all the lavish descriptions with rats and nail guns and so on are just for the ladies.
I don't think people can tell what's misogynistic and what isn't any more. Here's a real life anecdote. A couple of years ago I went into Waterstones in downtown Nottingham, and mooched around. In this shop probably others too the staff had put various books on display with their own handwritten enthusiastic recommendations underneath. Well, that was nice, I liked reading them, until I came to the handwritten card under American Psycho.
Believe it or not, my GR friends, I actually wrote a protest email to the manager, who wrote back with an apology and said he'd removed the tasteless comments. You know, this book reveals how much of a different planet some people are on than the one I'm on. It's not a good feeling. So imagine how the following remarks warmed the cockles of my heart: At pages, American Psycho is probably unfinishable except by adolescents and sociopaths But as with many satirists, it is unclear whether he is criticising the horrors he depicts, or simply wallowing in them.
Either way, Ellis's determination to rub the reader's face in the gore carriessome heavy costs. Many people have no strong desire to read sustained passages of pornographic and misogynistic violence, in which, for instance, masked men urinate on a bound actress Aug 15, Emily May rated it it was ok Shelves: , horror.
This book shocked me. Though not for any of the reasons I might have expected. Not shocking fact 1: This book is about a psychopath. Yes, how very astute of me. I hadn't seen the movie before I picked American Psycho up, but most people who know a bit about books know a bit about Patrick Bateman. Despite this book not being very old, Bateman has a certain infamy amongst fictional serial killers and psychopaths. He is so wholly devoid of morality, completely disconnected from reality and human emo This book shocked me.
He is so wholly devoid of morality, completely disconnected from reality and human emotion, and obsessed with things , reeling off designer name after designer name, presenting what could be seen as Ellis' criticism of modern society and consumerism.
Not shocking fact 2: This book is extremely graphic and violent. Well, it is a book about a serial killer; I didn't expect flowers and happiness. I should warn you if you're the kind of person who gets squeamish easily or are upset by graphically violent and disturbing scenes - this isn't the book for you. Bateman describes in a detached first person narrative each grisly atrocity he commits. Not shocking fact 3: Patrick Bateman is a misogynistic piece of crap.
But I don't think that necessarily means the book or the author is. Or maybe yeah, Bret Easton Ellis could be a raging misogynist, but that's really not the point I took from the book. Bateman most definitely harbors no feelings or sympathy towards women, he deconstructs the women he meets, piece by piece, until they're reduced to just a sum of boobs, ass and vagina.
His psychopathic nature is not limited to women, but his absolute and unending disdain for the female sex is apparent from the very beginning. Though, he's a psychopath so I'm not sure what some people were expecting.
The misogyny debate about this book greatly interests me. But I've never thought that just showing the existence of something as part of a story equates to endorsing it. I suppose American Psycho might promote misogyny in the same way that any violent art might promote violence.
And I always remember a conversation I had with this guy way back in high school. We all had to read weekly news stories every Friday morning in our form rooms and one week there was this piece about "cheat dating" sites. As in, sites that encouraged married people to have affairs with others looking for affairs.
I remember being pretty horrified and saying to this guy "I really don't think that should even be allowed, it just encourages people to cheat". And he shrugged and said "The way I see it, if you're the kind of person who's going to stumble across that site and think 'woah, what a great idea', there probably wasn't much hope for you anyway".
And, you know, I think he was right. The 1 most shocking fact about this book: It was soooo boring. I wasn't shocked by the violence, the psychopath, the graphic language, or the misogyny. But it never once occurred to me that a book which promised so much horror could have me wanting to skim read with boredom.
The fact is, I found being inside Bateman's emotionally-detached mind really repetitive and dull after a while. It was impossible to form any kind of emotional connection with him and, because of the first person narration, it was also impossible to form much of an emotional connection with anything or anyone else in the novel. Secondly, the really gritty stuff doesn't happen until the second half of the book; the first half is filled with Bateman's constant descriptions of designer clothes, his misogyny-filled rants with his almost equally repulsive friends, and his completely unerotic porn-fuelled masturbation sessions.
By the time things got nasty, I was already losing interest. Boredom - way more than the graphically violent and disturbing - is unforgivable to me. View all 62 comments. Jun 29, karen rated it it was amazing. This book is TRUE. I live on an island of bankers, investment brokers and trust company lawyers and all of them are drunken, mad psychopaths with Jack Nicholson laughs and a propensity for getting into a lot of trouble at weekends.
They drink and they snort and they screw and they sail and they make loads of money and every now and again some of them disappear never to be heard of again.
The women, the secretaries and admin staff come out from the UK husband-hunting but quickly find they are the rare prey of these mad psycho partiers and they too tend to disappear. Deported or murdered? YOU decide! Going drinking with them usually ended up with some of the guys diving naked off the side of someone's yacht and then screaming they've lost their Rolexes.
If they knew who owned the property, they'd get a reward, if they didn't they sold it. I used to enjoy all that.
Now I have a bookshop, but then I had a bar. I kind of wish I had a bar, that kind of bar again. Oh, book review. I did enjoy the book and later the film. So true to life View all 47 comments.
American Psycho is an energetic display of brutal writing. I had to put the book down on several occasions whilst I recovered from the graphic nature of some of it. But the violence was so completely necessary in all its terribleness because it captures something very American Psycho is an energetic display of brutal writing.
But the violence was so completely necessary in all its terribleness because it captures something very disturbing about the world. A question, if you will: how many people truly know you? We only ever truly know ourselves because we are the only one who has access to our thoughts and hidden desires. Bateman knows this and he uses it to his advantage. He appears to be a conformist, blending comfortably into society and all its stupid materialistic aspirations.
He is very well aware of the problems society faces. His speech at the start of the book is a convincing argument, though none of his "friends" sat around the dinner table are willing to listen to him and address a real problem. They are too materialistic and self-absorbed to consider anything beyond their own lives.
They simply carry on with their conversation as if he never spoke; thus, he continues on with his own destructive behaviour and slowly becomes more and more trapped, repressed and angry. I think he was, however, only ever probing them for a response to know how much he can get away with. The book is a heavy critique on consumerism and the ridiculous nature of it. Everybody is obsessed with the latest brands and most expensive products. The homeless are always remarked on as Bateman walks past them wearing his ridiculously expensive clothing.
There are endless descriptions of goods and products. The use of such a device in the narrative was a perfect way to expose how out of touch society is. There is no hope in sight. Ellis shows us a dark part of reality, and it left me feeling rather depressed.
Afterwards, I found myself craving something light and fluffy, something that would lift my spirits and restore some of my faith in humanity. It affected me quite strongly, which bespeaks the power of this narrative. Read it if you dare. View all 28 comments. Feb 28, Jeffrey Keeten rated it it was amazing Shelves: s , greed , unnatural-appetites , horror. It is hard for me to make sense on any given level.
Myself is fabricated, an aberration. I am a noncontingent human being. My personality is sketchy and unformed, my heartlessness goes deep and is persistent.
My conscience, my pity, my hopes disappeared a long time ago probably at Harvard if they ever did exist. There are no barriers to cross. All I have in common with the uncontrollable and the insane, the vicious and the evil, all the mayhem I have caused and my utter indifference toward it I have now surpassed.
I still, though, hold onto one single bleak truth: no one is safe, nothing is redeemed. Yet I am blameless. Each model of human behavior must be assumed to have some validity. Is evil something you are? Or is it something you do? You want to talk to him?
Well, fuck you. Hardy har har har! If you are worried about him, you should be. For now, I feel under control. Is this how normal people dress? Homeless people in New York dress with better class than this guy. Fashion is everything, well, and great hair products. I must confess I killed him.
I mean, just having great taste in clothing is never going to be enough to save anyone You have to love those sculpted bodies of these rich bitches, who have all the time in the world to turn their figures into works of art. I just checked in the mirror, and my hair looks fucking amazing. I should buy this guy a nice suit. The rubes will pogo stick around the store when I bring that out of my. Jesus, he needs a real haircut, too. I ask him, jokingly, if he cuts his own hair.
He nods his head. So why am I here in Kansas, you might ask? Well my friends, I am drawn this way. Who am I? We are marginally different, but the rage that is in me is in you. I do understand that we may see different things in clouds, for instance. I have a larger responsibility to approach the world with a greater degree of honesty. Look at this passage he noted. I rip aside the duct tape on his mouth, which had to fucking hurt, and asked him, WTF?
Plus, you would need more depth for her to appreciate something else about you. I think I heard something snap. I have to put the tape back on his mouth because he is hollering with too much volume. I really much prefer the way women scream.
The tenor of their voices trips the light fantastic in my head. How many people have I killed? Well, too many to count. It is amazing what you can get away with when you have as much money as I do and look like I do. People are begging to spend time with me. It seems to me like they are really begging to be dismembered, burned with acid, eviscerated. We do have a few things that we need to get straight, and then I need to head back to New York.
Huey Lewis and the News is the greatest American rock band I notice that Keeten has the greatest hits, which earns him a painful bash to the knee.
You have to buy the complete albums. The rest of their songs are as important and fantastic as their hits. Second, Donald J. Trump is a genius. I admire him more than anyone else on the planet.
It takes a psycho to recognize a psycho. As far as I know, he is keeping it together, but I feel a kinship with him, a calling in the blood. Okay, so you see that I am fair.
I can get to New York without murdering anyone. So you think you want to read this book? Ellis, the sick bastard, did not spare the grotesque descriptions of my activities.
In fact, I read the damn book, and even I was starting to yawn a bit through all the blood and mayhem. I think he made his point about what kind of depraved monster, a true creature of God, I am WAY before he quit relating yet another senseless death. And yes, I know they are senseless because not one of my victims has quelled the beast.
Blood only begets more blood. I appreciate it that you all let me be me. Your ability to live with letting my madness run rampant means you are actually more insane than I am. Something for all of you to keep in mind Patrick Bateman is still out here. The tanning bed is a wonderful investment. I bought the same one as Donald. If you have a hardbody, come to New York. Look me up. I see from the notes here on the desk that Keeten is going to call this a Masterpiece. I used the tape from his garage.
View all 49 comments. Aug 30, Johann jobis89 rated it really liked it. He works by day on Wall Street, earning a fortune to complement the one he was born with. His nights he spends in ways we cannot begin to fathom. Where to begin This book "I've forgotten who I had lunch with earlier, and even more important, where. This book stands head and shoulders above the rest as the most disturbing book I've ever read. But, I absolutely loved it. Not because of how disturbing it was although I did find that mostly entertaining , but because I've never laughed out loud so much whilst reading a book!
He is severely deluded, shallow, neurotic In particular, I was sincerely impressed by Bateman's ability to identify exactly what designer you're wearing by sight alone - I mean, surely he is wasted in his job as an investment banker?!
There must be some way he can make use of this incredible talent! People had previously commented about how annoying it was when the book goes off on random tangents where Bateman breaks down different musical artists' careers. I found this weirdly enjoyable - particularly the chapters where he discusses Genesis and Whitney Houston in great detail. Although I was not too impressed when Bateman described Bruce Springsteen as overrated but he made up for it by later telling a stranger on the street that Brilliant Disguise by the Boss was the happiest song he could think of - how depressing and sad is that song Bateman's obsession for serial killers also reminded me of myself, he would slide that chat in anywhere he could.
It's just so funny and full of satire that I couldn't NOT love it, it really appealed to my dark sense of humour. American Psycho also provides a really disturbing social commentary on the upper-class in Manhattan in the s, a society full of racism and sexism, where a lot of emphasis is placed on image and wealth.
Bateman has a crazy obsession with Donald Trump - a real representation of the times - and it honestly baffles me that this man is now President of the United States.
Ellis really succeeds in painting a rather despicable picture of consumerism in America. The murders and torture are brutal - consider this a warning!
It's graphic and detailed, and the creativity and originality that Ellis manages to bring to some of them is staggering. The sex scenes are pornographic in terms of the level of the detail included, and I actually found these much more uncomfortable to read than the murders. This book won't be for everyone, and it's one of those books that although I enjoyed almost every page, I would feel cautious recommending it to others. Just prepare yourself if you decide to pick it up!
And please don't think of me as one sick puppy for enjoying this satirical masterpiece. View all 5 comments. Loved this book. One to give me a book hangover. Didn't want it to end. Always loved the film and the book is really not far off. Descriptions were OTT. Dark Masterpiece Love the scene with the business cards. I don't usually bother giving negative reviews here, but I feel it's time to nail my colours to the mast and identify a few problematic titles.
Problem 1: American Psycho. It's funny how many people qualify their glowing reviews of this book with the words 'I didn't enjoy it but Maybe I'm old-fashioned, but I would have thought even a disturbing book, movie, song or painting should at least be enjoyable on some level if it's to gain its I don't usually bother giving negative reviews here, but I feel it's time to nail my colours to the mast and identify a few problematic titles.
Maybe I'm old-fashioned, but I would have thought even a disturbing book, movie, song or painting should at least be enjoyable on some level if it's to gain its audience's love, and if it can't gain that love then it's certainly not worthy of glowing reviews. To me, American Psycho is damn near loveless, its murder scenes especially, and I don't buy the line that there's anything medicinal in those scenes either.
What we have here is 2 books, or better, a book and a bunch of uninspired self-consciously provocative crap tacked onto it for the sake of controversy. Ellis said it himself: for the most part, American Psycho was just him writing out his frustration at his life, which corresponded closely, for the most part, to Patrick Bateman's; the murder scenes were added later.
This is a telling admission. While there's something mildly enjoyable about Ellis ripping apart in prose the yuppies he obviously knows so well, the tone changes entirely every time a character is ripped apart for real.
Yeah, parts of American Psycho are satirical, but not the violent parts - they are flat, vacant, bland. And it's a sad thing, that this young, lost, numbed writer felt the need to dress up his comedy of manners in wolf's clothing. You can imagine why he did it. Not for money necessarily, but from the same misguided notion that leads his fans to believe there is something medicinal in torturing themselves by reading this shit: the poor sap thought he was writing something 'important'!
Well I'm sorry, but the only important thing about American Psycho is that it illustrates - by its existence, by its success - something deeply wrong with the society that gave birth to it. Any dickhead with a halfway decent grasp of prose could have written this splatter-porn; on the level of artistry it's dull as dull can be.
But it illustrates something: the banality of evil. Brett Easton Ellis is no more a psycho than you or me, nor does he demonstrate any deep knowledge of what a psycho might be. But by parading his numbness, his naivety, his insensitivity, he demonstrates how a human might unwittingly do evil. And to my mind, there is something evil in what he's done, by seeking to legitimise this shit.
In the end, there's only one question that's important here: does the world need more violence-for-violence's sake? I say absolutely not. And this is coming not from a wowser or an anti-violence lobbyist, but from a diehard fan of Clockwork Orange and Reservoir Dogs.
One reviewer points out that the uproar over American Psycho is ridiculous given the number of malevolent, misogynistic slasher films on constant display in our culture, and to an extent I agree.
But what I find reprehensible in American Psycho is the pose - that this is somehow above those slasher films - when Ellis himself has admitted that all the conceptual justifications only occurred to him after he was demonised, as a way to talk himself out of trouble. Is Brett Easton Ellis a mysoginist? To me he's more like a parrot, repeating the refrain of a sick culture.
Well if you need a parrot to remind you what's wrong with clinical descriptions of excessive violence towards women then this is the book for you. And - wrong as this may sound to some of you - I'll enjoy it. Because art is meant to be enjoyed.
Yes, it can change you, hurt you, get under your skin, but only if you love it. Personally, I wonder how anyone could love American Psycho. An absolute piece of shit and probably the worst book I have ever bothered finishing. View all 43 comments. Oct 01, Daniel Martin rated it it was amazing Recommends it for: people with open minds.
Shelves: fiction , favorites. Truly fascinating. First of all, you have to be prepared to be let into the mind of a psychopath. That entails more than murder, which a lot of people reviewing this book completely miss -- what is psycopathy? The lack of empathy, which is judging people as objects rather than understanding they experience the concept of "I" exactly like you do, lack of remorse, and bold egotistical traits. People exist to consume product, and to judge them by what they consume, by the way, for they're just another product that YOU consume.
Don't pull the string any farther than that by the way, in case you find out your own idea of yourself is just as fake , and you are an outside entity, afloat and subject to this competitive world in which you need to WIN. This book was written in and it's no mistake that Patrick Bateman idolizes Donald Trump. And look, it's not just a book writing about the shittiness of the world; if that were the case, anyone could write good books by just filling them with the worst parts of our culture.
The point is, you can understand it and it's often, well Or compelling. Or understandable. Or sad. It is after all based on a very real human condition, not just a satirical critique of the worst of human traits. And about murdering people. You like that? I know it's not standard, but a protagonist CAN be a villain.
If you think experiencing or creating something makes you an advocate of it, you're missing out on a lot of good art. Anyways, the entire book is written from Patrick Bateman's point of view, and Patrick Bateman is a materialistic vain insecure obsessive compulsive hallucinating yeah, mysogynistic delusional psychopath. And you will be completely enveloped in his world. This is what traps you and makes the book so addicting. I would read this book at the park, or on the bus, and when I'd put it down to join the rest of the human world it was almost impossible.
For a good 10 minutes I'd just be staring at people feeling a million miles away. Learn from this, but don't identify with it; this itself is a type of compassion to feel what a lot of people in this country are stuck in. You don't skip over the bits about his facial creams, you absorb it and afterwards let your jaw drop that he is more passionate about it than any human life, or feeling.
People ARE materials to him, just more useless and often tasteless ones. Maybe you won't even notice when a talking cheerio is sitting in a chair being interviewed, since you can't be sure of what he's hallucinating either. View all 10 comments. Aug 29, GTF rated it it was amazing. Where to begin? Well firstly, I will just comment on the violence in this novel and say that it contains some of the most graphic torture and killings that I have ever read about both in the real and fictional world.
There are wild and creative forms of brutality performed on people that I didn't know were possible. I am not easily put off by goriness, but a lot of pages of this book were difficult to read.
It goes without saying that 'American Psycho' is not for the faint-hearted. The story is t Where to begin? The story is told from the perspective of a wealthy investment banker named Patrick Bateman who lives on one of the most prestigious streets in New York City.
The beginning of the novel suggests nothing too horrific about Bateman, but he does often mutter very questionable remarks about himself under his breath, begins seething over trivial matters, and is remarkably meticulous with assessing expensive clothes and jewelry.
To the reader, he is initially just another self-absorbed upper-class asshole who lives a very extravagant, promiscuous and drug-fueled lifestyle. However, the dark and cruel side of Bateman's character eventually manifests and his acts of murder and sadism become a frequent hobby.
It also becomes increasingly clearer that his sanity is very dubious, as he develops trouble with distinguishing the real from the imagined. His decaying sanity along with his astounding callousness creates a highly unreliable narrator.
In a way this book reminded me of 'The Catcher in The Rye' with the addition of appalling violence and insanity as it is not centred around a plot but instead just features endless and intriguing pondering of the male narrator. Easton Ellis is very skilled at creating characters. He can divide people into various categories of habits, intellect, temperament, level of empathy etc. View all 8 comments. I read about it years ago and avoided it because of all the stories or gore and misogyny associated with it.
Then, I heard friends discussing it less critically. So, when the library opened after the holiday break, I took it home That threw me off as an evil portent. Not that I am queezy about harsh language, just that that word for me conjures the same negativity and images of slavery sexual in this case that it seriously put me off.
I am reading the gory strange Bunny by Mona Awad as penance. View all 51 comments. As far as I can tell, there are two ways to interpret this book.
The first is as a hysterically funny, incredibly dark satire on the excess, greed and materialism of rich young Americans in the late s. The second is as a hideously misogynist extended fantasy about the abuse, torture and murder of women.
It's the second interpretation that raises issues for me. I am a feminist, and proud to say so; yet I absolutely loved this book. So is it possible to be a feminist and still enjoy American P As far as I can tell, there are two ways to interpret this book.
So is it possible to be a feminist and still enjoy American Psycho? My personal, subjective answer to this question is yes. I can understand the objections others have raised and, unsurprisingly, I found the violent scenes intensely disturbing and difficult to read, and skimmed over the worst parts in the same way I'd squint at the screen during a particularly bloody film scene. The titular psycho, protagonist and narrator, Patrick Bateman, is undoubtedly a horrifically misogynist character - both in terms of the hideous things he does to women and in the minute details of the ways in which he perceives and judges them.
The female characters pretty much all of them, one by one are objectified in the ultimate way - desired, fucked, tortured, dissected, even eaten.
The violence is often juxtaposed closely with graphically detailed sex scenes or fantasies, with the two flowing into one another until they begin to seem almost inseperable. To me, this feels like a damning comment on the links between pornography, the consumer of pornography's view of women, and violent behaviour. And after all I've read about the author's motivations in writing the novel and other readers' and critics' reactions to it, I'm fairly sure this is how it's meant to be read.
The story is so obviously an allegory that, to be honest, I find it hard to understand how anyone could take it seriously as a fantasy of violence. Bateman announces his crimes to colleagues and girlfriends at numerous points, with these confessions become more blatant and more desperate as the book goes on - yet it seems nobody ever hears him, or their own self-absorption and greed is advanced to such a level that they don't notice or care.
The character becomes more and more of a blank canvas as the book goes on, a development underlined by the fact that he is constantly being mistaken for someone else, or spotting an acquaintance and not being sure exactly who it is. The men melt into a homogenous blur of Brooks Brothers suits, Valentino ties, slicked-back hair and nonprescription glasses; the women into an interchangeable mass of blonde hair, big tits, whiny voices and Carolina Herrera silk blouses.
In the end it doesn't seem that Bateman is actually a character as much as an amalgam of these people: their obscene greed, materialism, lack of empathy and empty selfishness - mixed in with astounding naivety and ignorance - concentrated and personified. As the narrative becomes ever more surreal and descends into madness towards the book's conclusion, the latter theory begins to seem more and more likely.
Bateman's supposed victims seem to reappear; he is involved in an impossibly lengthy police shoot-out which yields no retribution; he begins to step outside himself, narrating from a third-person perspective. The only incident in which he is identified as a killer by someone else appears, at second glance, to be a straightforward robbery. At the very end of the story, the reader is left to make up their own mind about the truth of events, making this a classic example of the unreliable narrator genre I really should create an unreliable-narrators shelf here, I love them so much.
This book is, as its reputation suggests, a harrowing read at times, but it's also truly hilarious in parts - the endless repetition, the lengthy passages solemnly appraising the back catalogues of dreadful 80s bands, the meticulous descriptions of ludicrous meals and label-laden outfits. I loathe gratuitous violence and 'torture porn' films but while the violent scenes in this book are arguably unnecessary in their detail, they are contained within the context of a viciously intelligent satire.
I wavered between admiration, amusement and repulsion throughout many of the earlier chapters, but I really loved the ending; the build-up and the subtle changes and the conclusion itself, all so brilliantly done.
Altogether I thought this was an absolutely fantastic, if not always 'enjoyable', book and I don't feel bad about saying so. Do not read this book. Are you easily frightened? Do not read this review. Are you easily annoyed? Do not read about this asshole. Are you easily sickened? Do not read horrific tale. Are you easily dizzied? Do not read anything. The only reason I decided to read the damn book is because I noticed it was 1 on numerous Goodreads list.
When I first started reading, I was completely baffled as all the story entailed was Patricks self centered life, filled with his self absorbed unlikeable friends doing absolutely nothing worthwhile. What the hell is so impressive about that?? I imagined Christian Bale as Pat Bateman, which definitely helped make a day in the life of Pat enjoyable Here's a glimpse Yup that's a rundown of the first half of the book Can you see why I was confused?.. I kept reading and slowly but surely Patrick starting dropping little clues.
Here's a few Sadly animals were harmed in the story. I felt I should warn you.. So, am I still wondering why this is This is not for the faint of heart. The book has been awarded with , and many others. Please note that the tricks or techniques listed in this pdf are either fictional or claimed to work by its creator. We do not guarantee that these techniques will work for you. Some of the techniques listed in American Psycho may require a sound knowledge of Hypnosis, users are advised to either leave those sections or must have a basic understanding of the subject before practicing them.
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Loved each and every part of this book. I will definitely recommend this book to fiction, horror lovers. Your Rating:. Your Comment:. Read Online Download.
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