How to put this?
GLAMORAMA is many many things. GLAMORAMA is one very very long novel; GLAMORAMA is one of those books you’ll probably find on a 500-level English MA course; GLAMORAMA is not easy to read and GLAMORAMA is something of a work of genius. Now, it may not be as lengthy as say, Adam Levin’s THE INSTRUCTIONS or Don DeLillo’s UNDERWORLD but GLAMORAMA has so much going on behind the scenes and so much that is ultimately left unexplained to the reader and features so many different characters doing different things and introduces so many different themes and ideas and offers so many instances of writing genius that in the end, it all feels a bit overwhelming—a recurring theme in GLAMORAMA.
Abstractly, GLAMORAMA is to Bret Easton Ellis’ writing what FIGHT CLUB is/was to Chuck Palahniuk—and here, I am not talking plot or characters or success, rather, breadth and scope—but also, I feel that it is important to add that Palahniuk’s TELL ALL (with all its name-dropping-ness and discussion on celebrity stuff) feels like a terribly-flawed and less interesting GLAMORAMA but it’s also unfair to compare two books that are not that similar in reality. And at first, GLAMORAMA feels like it could have been two different books written by two very different authors but GLAMORAMA is one of those stories that feels absolutely (and this needs to be emphasized) confusing during the read but then, after it is all over, and in reflection, it (gradually) begins to make sense, sort of.
Again, GLAMORAMA is not an easy read, and really good books sometimes aren’t, and you have to be patient with this one, but like I said earlier, a lot of things will go unnoticed after a first read, and Ellis (purposefully) throws in a bunch of red herrings and several what the hell moments—and he does this with super explicit sex, amazingly graphic violence and several scenes featuring confetti—but when it all comes down to the nit-picking, I guess GLAMORAMA is really a story about excess and superficiality and the limits of control. And also, it’s about: sex, drugs, guns, super models, New York life, the cult of personality, extreme wealth, terrorism, Paris, celebrity, conspiracies, imposters, photo manipulation, hallucinations, ultra violence, pop culture, deception, confetti, music, the movie-making process, memories and dreams, post-modernism, expectation and eventually, regret. And while some reviews claim that GLAMORAMA is a jumbled mess of a novel—I agree, it is something of a beautiful mess; it’s not perfect, and it’s not supposed to be.
The first part of the book will read like an annoying YA book written for adults. It’s packed with: famous people names, the word “baby” in almost every line of dialogue, a severe amount of (what seems like) throw-away dialogue, a plot that doesn’t seem to be going anywhere, characters who all sound alike, a story that really isn’t a story, super-hyphenated-made-up-terms and did I mention, a nonexistent plot?
An example of the super-annoying YA-like dialogue from the fist part of the book:
“Yoki Nakamuri was approved for this floor,” Peyton says.
“Oh yeah?” I ask. “Approved by who?”
“Approved by, well, moi,” Peyton says.
“Who the fuck is Moi?” I ask. “I have no fucking idea who this Moi is, baby.”
“I’m Moi,” Peyton says, nodding. “Moi is, um, French.”
And ironically, this is the sort of setup—annoying dialogue and vague story with super-shallow people in boring situations—that is necessary for the second part of the book to truly shine. It’s a classic (and simple) case of opposites and role reversals.
In the second part: New York becomes Paris, Victor’s position of power becomes a lack, his drug of choice becomes a necessity and he switches to Xanax, the vapid tameness becomes dynamic brutality and even the way Victor thinks and speaks changes dramatically.
An (extreme) example:
“The mannequin springs grotesquely to life in the freezing room, screeching, arching its body up, again and again, lifting itself off the examination table, tendons in its neck straining, and purple foam starts pouring out of its anus, which also has a wire, larger, thicker, inserted into it...there is, I’m noticing, no camera crew around.”
And though we are never sure that everything Victor says or sees is real—and here we have the classic case of the unreliable narrator—GLAMORAMA is really a story that is less worried about the (satisfying) conclusion and more concerned with the process, meaning: the characters, the dialogue, the bizarre scenarios, the violence, the ambiguity, the—everything; that’s what matters most in a story.
A FEW SPOILERS, SORT OF
And no, I can’t tell you why everything’s always “freezing” or too cold, and I can’t tell you why there’s confetti everywhere, and I couldn’t tell you why only Victor notices that it smells like shit, and I couldn’t say if: the cameras, the PA’s, the best boys, the film crew, the whole shebang was really real or just a fabrication, and I don’t really know how they were able to impersonate Victor, Lauren, Bruce, Jamie or everyone else and I don’t know if Palakon ever really told Victor the truth and I don’t know what really happened to Marina and I couldn’t tell you why Christian Bale keeps showing up and I don’t know why there is an entire chapter that is basically an explicit sex scene between three people and I don’t know what it means when Victor keeps saying “we’ll slide down the surface of things…” and I couldn’t tell you what it means when Victor keeps telling people that “the better you look, the more you see” and I couldn’t begin to explain the quote “it’s what you don’t know that matters most”—but does it really matter?
END OF SPOILERS
Or rather, consider this. Is it better (and easier) to admit that the entire story was maybe just a movie? And that—the dialogue, the memories, the people, the bodies, the sex scenes, the bombings, all the crying and all the dying and all the inconsistencies, the plot holes—none of it was real—just part of some movie script?