Fight
Club is certainly not limited to only a single genre. It’s a rare example
of a piece of media that manages to balance several distinct genres, while
ensuring that one side doesn’t tip too far. For fans of thriller novels, there
are plenty of sequences where the reader is always kept on the edge of their
seat in anticipation of what happens next. We’re initially introduced to the
fragility of characters when Bob dies. He had been established as a relatively important
character earlier in the novel, and is killed off without his death even being
described; he simply “dies”, and we never feel like Marla or the protagonist
are above death as a result. When the protagonist is trapped in a car with a deranged
follower behind the wheel, forcing him to churn out concise and swift answers
to his questions, no otherworldly force is keeping either of them safe as he deliberately
places himself in danger by swerving in front of cars to make a point, and
these scenes and more real and suspenseful because of this.
The drama and dark comedy of the
novel go hand-in-hand. The relationship between Marla and the protagonist and
how it clashes with her relationship with Tyler is something that shines particularly
brightly. Drama is developed through typically hostile interaction between
characters, and dark humor is developed generally through the narration of the
protagonist, and only occasionally through sequences that are fundamentally humorous
by nature, such as the scene involving Tyler using Marla’s mother’s fat as an ingredient
in his soap, or when Tyler and the protagonist urinate in the soup of the rich.
It’s admirable how capable that Palahniuk is to blend deadly seriousness with
gallows humor, and to produce something entertaining out of it. Scenes where
the protagonist, as he rides a downward spiral to the epitome of the word “depraved”,
injects a few quips into a conversation with a woman who has recently tried to
overdose on prescription pills, are what sets Fight Club apart from other modern novels that adhere to a strict
genre or subgenre.
can i have it back sometime?
ReplyDeleteNo, never. It is mine now.
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