Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Ellis revisits past in his first novel in over a decade

- By Mae Anderson

Fans will welcome a return to the growing metafictio­nal “Ellisverse.” Newcomers will either be drawn in or repelled by Ellis’ bleak mix of sex, violence and wealthy teenage disaffecti­on.

It’s the 1980s and rich prep school students in Los Angeles are living the life of absentee parents, fancy cars, drugs, sex and disaffecti­on.

That’s the plot of Ellis’ breakout 1985 hit “Less Than Zero,” published when he was 21, as well as “The Shards,” Ellis’ propulsive and twisty new novel, his first in almost 13 years, first serialized on his podcast. But this time, the lead character’s name is Bret Easton Ellis, and the setting is the Buckley School, which Ellis actually attended (he uses his senior yearbook photo as his author photo on the book jacket to drive that point home).

Another difference: The Trawler is lurking in the San Fernando Valley, a mysterious figure responsibl­e for a growing number of breakins, missing pets and grotesque murders.

Ellis (the character) begins the novel as an adult in the present day, looking back at his teen years and poking fun at his own image.

“The man who wrote ‘American Psycho’ was actually, some people were surprised to find out, just an amiable mess, maybe even likeable, and not nearly the careless nihilist so many people mistook me for,” he writes at the beginning.

But he’s drawn to revisit the past. Ellis recounts how “his” paradisiac­al senior year is disrupted by the appearance of a handsome new student, Robert Mallory, just as The Trawler’s gruesome crimes begin making the news.

When a close friend of Ellis goes missing, Ellis becomes more and more obsessed and paranoid about Mallory’s mysterious background and The Trawler’s crimes, fracturing his friendship with Buckley’s golden couple, Thom and Susan, and threatenin­g to send him spiraling into madness. But as he unravels, is Ellis as reliable a narrator as we’re led to believe?

Ellis is open about his influences, peppering the book with references to Stephen King books and movies such as “The Shining” and “Cujo” (although “The Shards,” with its framing of an adult looking back on a devastatin­g trauma that happened to him in his teens, more closely resembles “It”), as well as Joan Didion, whom the character calls his favorite writer. Santa Ana winds, which Didion famously chronicles, appear just as the plot grows twistier.

Fans of Ellis will welcome a return to the growing metafictio­nal “Ellisverse.” Newcomers will either be drawn in or repelled by Ellis’ bleak mix of sex, violence and wealthy teenage disaffecti­on.

 ?? ?? “The Shards” by Bret Easton Ellis (Knopf, $30)
“The Shards” by Bret Easton Ellis (Knopf, $30)

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