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Survivor: A Novel

Survivor: A Novel

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Author: Chuck Palahniuk
Publisher: Anchor
Category: Book

List Price: $13.95
Buy New: $7.09
You Save: $6.86 (49%)



New (52) Used (35) Collectible (9) from $6.94

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 385 reviews
Sales Rank: 3334

Media: Paperback
Edition: 1st Anchor Books ed
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 304
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6
Dimensions (in): 7.9 x 5.2 x 0.7

ISBN: 0385498721
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54
EAN: 9780385498722
ASIN: 0385498721

Publication Date: January 4, 2000
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Also Available In:

  • Paperback - Survivor
  • Hardcover - Survivor: A Novel
  • Audio Cassette - Survivor
  • Audio Cassette - Survivor: Library Edition
  • Audio CD - Survivor
  • MP3 CD - Survivor
  • Audio Download - Survivor (Unabridged)
  • Audio CD - Survivor: Library Edition

Similar Items:

  • Choke
  • Fight Club: A Novel
  • Invisible Monsters
  • Lullaby
  • Haunted: A Novel

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com Review
Some say that the apocalypse swiftly approacheth, but that simply ain't so according to Chuck Palahniuk. Oh no. It's already here, living in the head of the guy who just crossed the street in front of you, or maybe even closer than that. We saw these possibilities get played out in the author's bloodsporting-anarchist-yuppie shocker of a first novel, Fight Club. Now, in Survivor, his second and newest, the concern is more for the origin of the malaise. Starting at chapter 47 and screaming toward ground zero, Palahniuk hurls the reader back to the beginning in a breathless search for where it all went wrong. This time out, the author's protagonist is self-made, self-ruined mogul-messiah Tender Branson, the sole passenger of a jet moments away from slamming first into the Australian outback and then into oblivion. All that will be left, Branson assures us with a tone bordering on relief, is his life story, from its Amish-on-acid cult beginnings to its televangelist-huckster end. All of this courtesy of the plane's flight recorder.

Speaking of little black boxes, Skinnerians would have a field day with the presenting behavior of the folks who make up Palahniuk's world. They pretend they're suicide hotline operators for fun. They eat lobster before it's quite... done. They dance in morgues. The Cleavers they are not. Scary as they might be, these characters are ultimately more scared of themselves than you are, and that's what makes them so fascinating. In the wee hours and on lonely highways, they exist in a perpetual twilight, caught between the horror of the present and the dread of the unknown. With only two novels under his belt, Chuck Palahniuk is well on his way to becoming an expert at shining a light on these shadowy creatures. --Bob Michaels

Product Description
From the author of the cult sensation Fight Club (now a major motion picture starring Brad Pitt, Edward Norton, and Helena Bonham Carter) comes Survivor.

"A turbo-charged, deliciously manic satire of contemporary American life." --Newsday

"The only difference between suicide and martyrdom is press coverage," according to the "been there, done that" wisdom of Tender Branson, last surviving member of the Creedish Death Cult. At the opening of Chuck Palahniuk's hilariously unnerving second novel, Tender is cruising on autopilot, 39,000 feet up, dictating the whole of his life story into Flight 2039's "black box" in the final moments before crashing into the vast Australian outback.

Not since Kurt Vonnegut's Mother Night has there been as dark and telling a satire on the wages of fame and the bedrock lunacy of the modern world. Wickedly incisive and mesmerizing, Survivor is Chuck Palahniuk at his deadpan peak.



Customer Reviews:   Read 380 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Survivor: A Novel   October 1, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Survivor by Chuck Palahniuk *****

Survivor is the story of where it all went wrong. The point in our lives where we have all had choices to make. The choices that affect the rest of our lives. Survivor is the search for something far and something big, maybe something bigger than all of us, it is one mans search for something true.

In this apocalyptic tale Tendor Branson relives his entire live in an attempt to find closure. As he retells his story of servitude, and his survival from the same things that constrict us all we realize the things that are actually important and the emphasis we put on somethings just isn't worth it.

Survivor was UpChuck's second novel and possibly his best. Written with great literary prose and clever anecdotes it is both his most uplifting and insightful, as well as his most humoured and comical. Chuck Palahniuk did it again with Survivor.



5 out of 5 stars Great   September 10, 2008
I wasn't expecting much at first, but then I couldn't put it down. Great book.


5 out of 5 stars amazing imagination   September 4, 2008
over the top satire. Best I've read since Tom Robbins. It just keeps coming at you.


3 out of 5 stars Not as good as excpected but ok   September 2, 2008
 0 out of 1 found this review helpful

I wanted to read a book like Fight club (which I have never read) but I saw that movie so I bought this instead. I do not regret that since this book had some good sections which was entertaining. However I found it slow and not so captivating as lets say Stephen Kings books. Not even close. It was an ok book would not really recommend it, infact at the end I just wanted the book to be finished already..! I would buy Fight club instead I think it would be better but I don't know =).


2 out of 5 stars Same thing as Fight Club, different premise   August 30, 2008
 0 out of 1 found this review helpful

How disappointed I am to realize only 20 or 30 pages into the book that Survivor is a cookie-cutter version of Fight club with a different premise. Let's look at the basics:

Main character of each, a quirky, nihilistic anti-hero whom you develop an odd sympathy for.
(sort-of) Antagonist -- Tyler Durden/Adam Branson -- character that the protagonist can't live with or without.
"Love" interest - Marla/Fertility, women whose weird personas heavily influence the protagonist's life and the unfolding of events. They, along with the antagonist, force the main character into a strange situation he wouldn't otherwise be in.

In both Fight Club and Survivor, the protagonist spends an awful amount of time explaining facts on how-to's and other trivial matters. This is what annoyed me the most with Survivor -- Chuck, you already did this extensively in Fight Club. I didn't care when I read about how to thread a film projector (though I just went with the flow) and I certainly don't care how to get blood stains out of a carpet.

Any there's plenty of prose style that's similar between the two. It gets old fast. It get annoying fast.

Enough comparison. Let's talk about the story itself. I think the basic idea is great. But then he throws in a half-baked twist every thirty pages. And these things come in out of nowhere. One minute Tender's a pawn cleaning houses, two (short) chapters later he's the most popular man in the country. Things enter the story almost without precedent. Here, you can really see how he is TRYING too hard. And you will not get a real sense of anything beyond him cleaning the house. I found it hard to believe that Tender was a media mongol. I was reading the words, but I couldn't feel them. And the ending was the most arbitrary I've ever read in a novel. You can tell Chuck was running out of steam. I won't spoil anything about it.

Reading Survivor is like watching an ant colony construct a nest. You look at it from far above and you visualize the overall blueprint and result of everything, but it whizzes by so fast and so removed from your point of view, you can see what the ants built but you didn't experience anything.

I've been told by multiple people that all his books are similar, not in basic story premise but in other smaller characteristics, much like I explained above. I, therefore, will probably never read another of his books because, in the parlance of Palahniuk, they read like Survivor reads like Fight Club reads like... I suggest reading Fight Club and stopping there. You're not missing out on anything beyond that.



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