Home :: Books :: Literature & Fiction  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction

Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
Choke

Choke

List Price: $13.95
Your Price: $10.46
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 .. 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Chuck and Choke Are Super Sweet!!
Review: Prophetic isn't the right word, but it is the first one to come to mind. I read "Choke" over the course of a week and I loved it! Chuck Palahniuk has a gift that is beyond description for making everything he writes real. Fight Club floored me, Survivor thrilled me, Invisible Monsters shook me, and Choke enthralled me. For anyone out there who wants a great satirical, yet and still seriously real, read buy Choke and you won't be disappointed.

On a side note, after getting to meet Chuck at his first ever conference devoted to him here at Edinboro University he is what it's all about. Real, down to earth, and damned funny!! Chuck Palahniuk has it all...thanks for being as real in life as your writing is in soul!!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An amazing book.
Review: I read a lot of books from all genres. Fiction, non-fiction, sci-fi, fantasy, etc. etc. etc. This book is the best so far. As you're reading it, you feel your mind being turned inside out: you become aware of the things that were there all your life, yet you never counsciously thought of. Amazing explanations of human nature coupled with humor just gets you to say "damn" outloud on almost every page. I would recommend anyone to get this book.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: pajsfasjdasudas!!!!
Review: Tried to think of one word to sum this book up, and I couldn't. My rankings for his 4 books go like this: 1. Survivor 2. Fight Club 3 Invisible Monsters 4 Choke. Not to say choke is the worst, because I'll take Choke over a bunch of the [crud] that is out there today. I just wasn't drawn in as much as I was the other stories. As it was with his other books, I love the style in which he writes, but after 150 pages or so, you hit that HUH????!?!?! point. And typically with about 20 pages to go a bombshell is dropped. Another is dropped with about 5 pages to go. Does it all work? Yes. Is it fresh and unique, maybe. The sex addict scenes are very amusing, as are the colonial towns as well. At some point though, I'm wondering when Chuck will take a different approach that is not in the things must get worse before they can get better mode. All in all though, I found this book to be entertaining and a quick read. Now have to wait until the next one comes out.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Gasp! Its Good!
Review: Palahnuik has done it again, for a fourth time. Usually an author at this point gets bland or switch to another style of writing. Choke is about Victor Manicini, a sexaholic working in the colonial era trying to find enough money to keep his mom alive, he thinks. This nearly 300-page book takes us through an adventure of his "science and sadism" to find out the complete truth about his life's purpose.

Choke's writing style is still reminiscent of the faithful "Fight Club" and manages to have great power in its symbolism and philosophy. Like all of Palahnuik's other novels, I placed this book down and sighed muttering, "I'm glad I'm not living like this." His emphasis on the epitome of depression and drudgery is haunting. I honestly don't believe anyone who reads his books, including "Choke", will look at the world the same as before.

Choke is worth all the money. While I still believe Fight Club is the most riveting and powerful, Choke is still a great novel to pick, fling through, and appreciate life.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Easy Read, Nothing New
Review: I am a huge fan of Chuck P. But this novel is just like an excercise in everything he has already done.

not many new ideas and the hooks and gimmicks he uses are growing slightly old. not terrible or boring, but not even close to great.

i thought he'd take more chances but apparently there's not much left in the tank. Chuck's good at what he does, but what he does is getting repetitive.

still better than most of the...[stuff] out there. But his worst to this date. at least if you read it last.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Choke delivers in the clutch!
Review: In literature today, Chuck Palahniuk is the man of the moment. With the possible exception of "Glorious Failure" by Ben Jonjak, Palahniuk's works have established themselves as the voice of the era. With the controversial "Fight Club" Palahniuk muscled his way into the spotlight and gave his readers an uncompromising look at the flaws in our sometimes over-glorified culture. Now with the no less controversial "Choke" Palahniuk continues to deliver.

"Choke" is an exploration of sexual deviancy, but the main theme of the novel, like "Fight Club," is the modern-day angst caused from the apparent purposelessness of our watered-down, machine assisted lifestyle. There is a certain desperation that can be felt behind the novel's sometimes witty, sometimes grotesque, always compelling escapades. More so than in any of his other novels, you can hear Palahniuk's own uncertainty behind the false bravado of his unfortunate characters. Essentially, "Choke" is a discussion on what is most important in life and a plea for some guidance as to how to achieve it. But by presenting this argument through a series of ill-conceived misadventures, the discussion is rendered light and compelling.

Palahniuk writes with a short, terse style that is always compared to Vonnegut but which also reminds me of Hemmingway. He tries to write as people speak, and the often grammatically garbled, yet perfectly understandable sentences that result are given a very spontaneous feel as a consequence. The novel is obviously well conceived and well polished, but it is not tediously overworked, as most novels that try to sound literary tend to be. Although I would hesitate to call Palahniuk's style new, he does add a dimension to this sort of "free" writing that I haven't seen before and which is very refreshing.

"Choke" is a marvelous novel. If you have any interest in being on the cutting edge of where literature is going, this is the book you must read. Although many of "Choke's" themes are very similar to the ones found in Palahniuk's previous books, "Choke" provides them with a more personal touch. Palahniuk has matured, and perhaps grown more confident as a writer; he is bringing his readers further and further into his confidence and I am very excited to see what he comes up with next.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Choke comes through in the clutch
Review: In literature today, Chuck Palahniuk is the man of the moment. With the possible exception of "Glorious Failure" by Ben Jonjak, Chuck Palahniuk's work is the premier voice of the times. With the controversial "Fight Club" Palahniuk muscled his way into the spotlight and gave his readers an uncompromising look at the flaws in our sometimes over-glorified culture. Now with the no less controversial "Choke" Palahniuk continues to deliver.

"Choke" is an exploration of sexual deviancy, but the main theme of the novel, like "Fight Club," is the modern-day angst caused from the apparent purposelessness of our watered-down, machine assisted lifestyle. There is a certain desperation that can be felt behind the novel's sometimes witty, sometimes grotesque, always compelling escapades. More so than in any of his other novels, you can hear Palahniuk's own uncertainty behind the false bravado of his unfortunate characters. Essentially, "Choke" is a discussion on what is most important in life and a plea for some guidance as to how to achieve it. But by presenting this argument through a series of ill-conceived misadventures, the discussion is rendered light and compelling.

Palahniuk writes with a short, terse style that is always compared to Vonnegut but which also reminds me of Hemmingway. He tries to write as people speak, and the often grammatically garbled, yet perfectly understandable sentences that result are given a very spontaneous feel as a consequence. The novel is obviously well conceived and well polished, but it is not tediously overworked, as most novels that try to sound literary tend to be. Although I would hesitate to call Palahniuk's style new, he does add a dimension to this sort of "free" writing that I haven't seen before and which is very refreshing.

"Choke" is a marvelous novel. If you have any interest in being on the cutting edge of where literature is going, this is the book you must read. Although many of "Choke's" themes are very similar to the ones found in Palahniuk's previous books, "Choke" provides them with a more personal touch. Palahniuk has matured, and perhaps grown more confident as a writer; he is bringing his readers further and further into his confidence and I am very excited to see what he comes up with next.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Fantastic. See Also: Superb, See Also: Another Gem.
Review: Palahniuk is turning out to be my favorite writer of contemporary fiction. This man is amazing. Considering that he could have started courting mainstream acceptance after the movie Fight Club gained so much attention, it's quite nice to see that he is willing to completely out-do himself on the shock-meter. As the introduction says, "You do not want to read this", then "this is your final warning". What we have here is another nihilistic look at contemporary American society, and all of the ills that come from trying to fit into its codes and ethics. In the world of Palahniuk, everyone is an addict, simply trying to use their addictions to drown the repetition and misery of the world around them. Victor Mancini, protagonist and sex-addict, knows that what he's doing is not out of love for anyone, but just to feel that he loves people, even if for a brief time. His mother is wasting away in a hospital, and his world seems to be falling apart. His job is the true definition of hell, his friend has become obsessed with rocks, and his true love interest may not be telling him everything. Add to this the possibility that he may be the current incarnation of Jesus and, JESUS! we have a complicated storyline. Yet it is handled with flair and finesse by Palahniuk, whose uniquestyle and structure is on glorius display here. As with all of Palahniuk's books, there is an underlying theme of redemption through breaking free of societal, religous, and familial constraints (sort of like Sartre, but not silly or contradictory). The world is ours once we realize that we alone can change it. Yet another masterpiece from Palahniuk

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A novel for us nobodys
Review: Strolling through the bookstore, broke, unemployed, I cracked open this book and after reading the first few paragraphs I knew I had to buy it. Max out that credit card. Who cares? Here's the author begging us NOT to love his hero. Here's a guy who isn't a master spy or a noble lawyer, doctor, soldier... Palahniuk creates a character who lives such an absurd life, but from the way he tells it could be the guy sitting next to you on the bus. These obsurdities are told in such hillarious detail that I couldn't help but laugh out loud and draw stares from the Starbucks crowd. (I'd look up daring them to ask me what was so funny.) Chuck Palahniuk draws the lines between the underground/urban folklore life and that of the "normal" people and how it's hard to tell if one is any better off than the other. All of this in a novel overflowing with useful/dangerous information/misinformation and suprising story revelations that speaks, in a demented way, to young adults who are not satisfied with the goals we are taught to accept. See Also: Fight Club See Also: Invisible Monsters See Also: Survivor

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Dangerous and Funny, but flawed
Review: I had been looking forward to the release of Choke after reading all of Palahniuk's previous novels. I came to him through Fight Club, like many, and have enjoyed the dark humor of Survivor and Invisible Monsters. This book is a must-have for Palahniuk fans - the style of depraved humor and didactic witicisms is intact - "Without true chaos, there is no hope for true peace... The laws that keep us safe, they condemn us to true boredom... If things don’t first get a lot worse, they’ll never really get better." Choke is populated with characters who stroll sex addicts anonymous class for partners, randomly abuse a variety of substances, and who can spew an endless variety of bizarre med school tidbits. On the other hand, this doesn't seem to be the novel that will break Palahniuk through beyond his already limited audience. There are a couple of scenes that are simply juvenile, even scatalogical (graphic bowel humor, a flossing scene with flying tidbits that lasts too long, etc.) In all, I think Chuck Palahniuk brings to the table all the trappings that people wanted to pin on Bret Easton Ellis a few years back. In my opinion, though, Chuck is funnier, riffs better in his prose, and speaks with a clearer voice...


<< 1 .. 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates