From the beginning, people were looking for their inner self. This theme was the subject of many books and research. This is no exception, the work of 1959, Siddhartha of Hermann Hesse. In this particular story, the hero Siddhartha tries to find his "inner self". He tried to achieve this goal in various ways, one being self denial or destruction. The same can be said about the 1996 book "Fight Club of Chuck Pranjuk".
In 1922, Hermann Hesse placed a young man of Siddhartha in the brilliant peace of Siddhartha. About a century later, Chuck Palahniuk opened numerous American eyes at his nihilistic masterpiece "Fight Club". These two novels were written at different times, different cultures, different readers and different purposes. One is a typical representative who loves both self and nature and the other focuses on the destruction of human beings and culture, but the two have amazing similarities in a latent sense. The only true road to freedom, peace, and happiness.
With devil novel "The Fight Club" by Chuck Palahniuk, readers can experience the twisted adventure built in the fight club. The first rule about the fight club is that you are not talking about the fight with the club. The letters Taylor Deden, Malasinger and the narrator formed the dynamics of the novel. The second rule of the fight club is that you are not talking about the fight with the club. The narrator incorporated a big story between seeing a little glimpse of his lifestyle and the relationship he formed. The third rule of Fight Flub is to fight two men per game. Throughout the novel, an anonymous narrator placed herself in the work of Taylor Deden and his fellow fight club. The fourth rule of the fight club is a fight. It becomes a game, follows rules and tries to bottom out. The fifth rule of the fight club is that there are no shoes and no shirt is fighting. The sixth rule of the fighting club is that the fight will continue as long as they need to.