American Psycho gets away with being one of the most didactic social satires ever written by also being one of the most rigorous. Every element of the social fabric is covered: Wall Street yuppie consumerism, intensely hollow interpersonal relationships, could-be-lame potshots at 80s popular music, designer brand obsession as a replacement for the human visage, restaurant culture (what you order, why you order it, pride of placement w/r/t seating, the social game of which restaurants are 'in', the power game of reservations), you get the idea. It's a form of tedium that sucks you into itself; you can feel the layers of your soul being stripped away by the tourism brochure dialogue and endless scheduled mundanity. You can understand how a Bateman comes to be. It also, ingeniously, leaves you completely unguarded for when the grotesque ultraviolence takes hold. I defer to the second chapter of Blood Meridian, a book with a reputation for disturbing violence but one wherein the mass and thoughtless genocides contained thereafter never dug as deeply into me as the kid expertly and cleanly vaulting over the bar, carefully selecting two bottles, breaking one over the bartender's head, passing the other from one hand to the next, backhanding the bartender with it, and then sticking the remnants of the bottle into his eye. It is the intimacy of this scene, the intentionality and competence behind his actions, that disturb me. 's violence is uniformly as intentional and intimate, though far more graphic. On that note, despite being the only book I've ever seen in a walk-in West Australian bookstore to be wrapped in plastic and stuck with an R18+ sticker, I was still caught off guard by the first attack of the book. The visceral pop of the eyeballs, the thunderous crunch of stomping on the dog's front legs; these images haven't left my head since reading it, though they have been joined by the even fouler scenes contained to the book's back half.
