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Lullaby | 
| Author: Chuck Palahniuk Publisher: Knopf Group E-Books Category: EBooks
List Price: $9.95 Buy New: $7.96 You Save: $1.99 (20%)

Rating: 267 reviews Sales Rank: 43349
Format: Kindle Book Media: Kindle Edition Pages: 272 Number Of Items: 1
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54 ASIN: B0013KAJR0
Publication Date: July 29, 2003 Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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Amazon.com Review The consequences of media saturation are the basis for an urban nightmare in Lullaby, Chuck Palahniuk's darkly comic and often dazzling thriller. Assigned to write a series of feature articles investigating SIDS, troubled newspaper reporter Carl Streator begins to notice a pattern among the cases he encounters: each child was read the same poem prior to his or her death. His research and a tip from a necrophilic paramedic lead him to Helen Hoover Boyle, a real estate agent who sells "distressed" (demonized) homes, assured of their instant turnover. Boyle and Streator have both lost children to "crib death," and she confirms Streator's suspicions: the poem is an ancient lullaby or "culling song" that is lethal if spoken--or even thought--in a victim's direction. The misanthropic Streator, now armed with a deadly and uncontrollably catchy tune, goes on a minor killing spree until he recognizes his crimes and the song's devastating potential. Lullaby then turns into something of a road trip narrative, with Streator, Boyle, her empty-headed Wiccan secretary Mona, and Mona's vigilante boyfriend Oyster setting out across the U.S. to track down and destroy all copies of the poem. In his previous works, including the cult favorite Fight Club, Palahniuk has demonstrated a fondness for making statements about the condition of humanity, and he uses Lullaby like a blunt object to repeatedly overstate his generally dim view. Such dogmatic venom undermines the persuasiveness of his thesis about mass communication and free will, but thankfully, Palahniuk offers some respite here by allowing for sympathy and love, as well as through his razor-sharp humor, such as his mock listings for Helen's possessed properties: "six bedrooms, four baths, pine-paneled entryway, and blood running down the kitchen walls...." At such moments, Lullaby casts a powerful spell. --Ross Doll
Product Description From the author of the New York Times bestseller Choke and the cult classic Fight Club, a cunningly plotted novel about the ultimate verbal weapon, one that reinvents the apocalyptic thriller for our times.
Carl Streator is a solitary widower and a fortyish newspaper reporter who is assigned to do a series of articles on Sudden Infant Death Syndrome. In the course of this investigation he discovers an ominous thread: the presence at the death scenes of the anthology Poems and Rhymes Around the World, all opened to the page where there appears an African chant, or “culling song.” This song turns out to be lethal when spoken or even thought in anyone's direction–and once it lodges in Streator's brain he finds himself becoming an involuntary serial killer. So he teams up with a real estate broker, one Helen Hoover Boyle–who specializes in selling haunted (or “distressed”) houses (wonderfully high turnover), and who lost a child to the culling song years before–for a cross-country odyssey to remove all copies of the book from libraries, lest this deadly verbal virus spread and wipe out human life. Accompanying them on this road trip are Helen's assistant, Mona Sabbat, an exquisitely earnest Wiccan, and her sardonic ecoterrorist boyfriend Oyster, who is running a scam involving fake liability claims and business blackmail. Welcome to the new nuclear family.
On one level, Lullaby is a chillingly pertinent parable about the dangers of psychic infection and control in an era of wildly overproliferated information: “Imagine a plague you catch through your ears . . . imagine an idea that occupies your mind like a city.” But it is also a tightly wound thriller with an intriguing premise and a suspenseful plot full of surprising twists and turns. Finally, because it is a Chuck Palahniuk novel, it is a blackly comic tour de force that reinforces his stature as our funniest nihilist and a contemporary seer.
From the Hardcover edition.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 262 more reviews...
as good as fightclub October 12, 2008 Rami Halim i admit it.. chuck palahniuk is not for everyone, but for those who can stomach him .. he is brilliant.. borderline sick but over the board genius... lulaby is as good as fight club if not better.. the plot is brilliant, it is fast paced and entertaining with its fair share of the Palahniuk wisdom .. and although the plot is full of clues and giveaways, at least i myself did not see the surprises coming.. and the make perfect sense.. and although lulaby is based on a stretch of fiction, chuck palahniuk makes it very believable... don't read other people's summary of the plot it will ruin it for you.. if you liked fightclub the movie or the book, you will love lullaby
Not sure about this one..... September 29, 2008 Nikki Leigh 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
I don't think much of this book. It is a little scattered. One thing will be going on and then the next it's something different. It's very hard to follow. It was one of those books I thought was never going to end. It was very hard to stay focused and finish reading this book.
excrement on stilts September 23, 2008 Min Jeong Lee 0 out of 5 found this review helpful
Strong words, perhaps, but having seen Fight Club, I believe neither Chuck nor his readers are pansies and can take it And I'm counting 1, and I'm counting 2, and 3, This, above, is what passes for showing rising anger in the book. The main character, Carl, stumbles upon an ancient song that kills people. Parents who read this lullaby to their babies kill them, and Carl is determined to find all the copies of the book and destroy them. On the way, he meets a real estate agent who assassinates people from a distance (using the song) in her spare time, a Wiccan, and a nature-loving, human-hating, power-hungry hunk named Oyster (oh and did I mention that Carl has anger management issues and a traumatic past?) So there you have it: take something horrible, like the death of babies in their cribs, add a weird twist: lethal lullabies!, strange characters, freewheeling prose, miracles, psychopathic killers, environmental destruction... and write in a frenetic, hip way, so as to paper over the fact that you don't have a story, or a plot, or any idea what you want to do with this material and I'm counting to 4, to 5, and to 6.... hey, I think i'll write a riff on modernity using that formula and no plot... do you think they'll publish me? maybe i'll also recycle that idea of hating humans and of wishing the earth covered in vines, and men returning to the good ol' days of hunting and gathering...rarrr... when we were in harmony with nature, and the neighbor's TV didn't drive us to homicidal anger this review, if it seems a little disjointed, I apologize (by the way, this is the kind of syntax Chuck uses sometimes)... it's a mirror held to the work, so what it reflects is just the truth The thing that i liked is that Chuck used some interesting factoids about alien species colonizing America (starlings, carp, etc.) and driving out or sickening the native species; this stuff was just thrown out, though, meant to shock you into hating modern humans and their careless, cruel ways Final thought: mental killing, in a novel, is an interesting idea that looks good on paper but doesn't really work; first of all, it's not developed; second, once you remove limits from what people can do, things become boring... killing from a distance, yeah, levitation, yeah, occupying other bodies, yeah, whatever... it' the equivalent of saying, i like everybody, all men and women, regardless, and I can sleep with anyone... really, a story needs limits and a sense of the possible and impossible; otherwise it's just an extended 'what if', like when stoners talk... Sorry for the ramble. Gonna go have a chicken sandwich.
By the balls August 25, 2008 Patrick J. Stiles 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This book grabbed me by the balls until I was done. I normally take a few months to get through a book, like Choke, but this was about a week. I would have only liked more main characters to die.
Unexpected dark humor... how can you resist? August 7, 2008 Charles Katis (Kennebunk, ME USA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This my first time reading Palahniuk. To say that he's unique is an understatement. "Lullaby" starts with normal characters but rapidly unfolds into the strangest world imaginable. The pages turn quickly to build a unique place with strange events. Dark humor seeps unexpectedly from aberrant places. The reality presented becomes distorted and twisted, molded into a strange, mystical actuality. At times, as other reviewers mentioned, I felt that I was not be getting the full dramatic effect out of my reading, as if I couldn't grasp what was occurring. Although, by completion, the novel spoke to me with a depth and intensity I have not experienced before. For those who have read the Amazon review, I agree that Chuck Palahniuk expresses potent themes on human control and nature through "Lullaby". I recommend this novel to those seeking impact and an ending you will reflect on. Thank you for reading, C.K.
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