More than twenty years have passed since Chuck Palahniuk announced the fight club in the world for the first time, which affected young people in many vulnerable positions and shocked their parents. But the theme that Palahniuk explored in that book - the castration of late capitalism followed by terrible fear and fear - has become more important than at that time. Modern people are aware of themselves in a dangerous situation, masculinity itself (right) is reevaluated, and in some cases it is ridiculed as the root cause of all social diseases. Many of them are faced with anxiety awareness that they will never succeed as parents.
Chuck Palahniuk is often categorized as its innocent neo-fascist, representing indifferent laziness and immoral life. Palahniuk's novel "The Fight Club" is critically investigating cultural standardization and contemporary use of consumer capitalism through contemporary sinism. However, many critics have overlooked that his book is usually guided by a narrator, and the narrator is simply a lonely person looking for ways to connect with others. - Vonnegut champion breakfast Kilgot Trout's analysis is a struggling novelist who can only publish his novels in pornographic magazines. Dwayne Hoover is a very wealthy car salesman on the verge of crazy. They only met once in their life, but the whole novel "Champion Breakfast" (1973) is based on this conference. The meeting was short, but the author Kurt Vonnegut had to express his message.