Glamorama

Front Cover
Pan Macmillan, 2006 - Fiction - 482 pages

The centre of the world: 1990s Manhattan. Victor Ward, a model with perfect abs and all the right friends, is seen and photographed everywhere, even in places he hasn’t been and with people he doesn’t know. On the eve of opening the trendiest nightclub in New York history, he’s living with one beautiful model and having an affair with another. Now it’s time to move to the next stage. But the future he gets is not the one he had in mind.

'Does for the cold, minimal '90s what American Psycho did for the Wall Street greed of the '80s. You name it, he manages to get it all in’ Vogue

'Gets under the skin of our celebrity culture in a way that is both illuminating and frightening' Daily Telegraph

'A Bonfire of the Vanities? Glamorama is more like a Semtex attack on our superficialities' Face

‘An epic that takes his blank surrealism into a realm equalled only by DeLillo’ Arena

‘A master stylist with hideously interesting new-fangled manners and the heart of an old-fashioned moralist’ Observer

‘Brilliant . . . He is fast becoming a writer of real American genius’ GQ

'An American masterpiece' Scotland on Sunday

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About the author (2006)

Bret Easton Ellis was born in Los Angeles, California on March 7, 1964. He attended Bennington College. In 1985, at the age of 23, his first novel, Less Than Zero, was published. His other works include The Rules of Attraction (1987), The Informers (1994), Glamorama (1998), Lunar Park (2005), and Imperial Bedrooms (2010). His most controversial book was American Psycho, a book for which he received an advance in the amount of $300,000 from Simon and Schuster, who then refused to publish the book while under attack from women's groups in regards to the content of the book. It was later made into a feature film.

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