Literature |
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Humor (Fiction) |
Summary
Summary
In the crowded greenroom of a porn-movie production, hundreds of men mill around in their boxers, awaiting their turn with the legendary Cassie Wright. An aging adult film star, Cassie Wright intends to cap her career by breaking the world record for serial fornication by having sex with 600 men on camera--one of whom may want to kill her.
Told from the perspectives of Mr. 72, Mr. 137, Mr. 600, and Sheila, the talent wrangler who must keep it all under control, Snuff is a dark, wild, and lethally funny novel that brings the presence of pornography in contemporary life into the realm of literary fiction.
Author Notes
Chuck Palahniuk was born in Pasco, Washington on February 21, 1962. He received a BA in journalism from the University of Oregon in 1986. Before becoming a full-time author, he worked as a journalist and as a diesel mechanic. He has written numerous novels including Survivor, Invisible Monsters, Lullaby, Diary, Haunted, Rant, Snuff, Pygmy, Tell-All, Damned, Doomed, Beautiful You, and Make Something Up: Stories You Can't Unread. Fight Club was made into a film by director David Fincher and Choke was made into a film by director Clark Gregg. He is also the author of Fugitives and Refugees, a nonfiction profile of Portland, Oregon, and the nonfiction collection Stranger Than Fiction.
(Bowker Author Biography)
Reviews (5)
Publisher's Weekly Review
Palahniuk delivers another entertaining and cynical social commentary on American materialism and gluttony. In her final pornographic performance, Cassie Wright has decided to be on the receiving end of a 600-man gangbang. Neither Cassie nor the men waiting for their chance with her expect her to survive. But some of the men have very different ideas about what this encounter will mean for them in their personal and professional lives. Todd McLaren does an excellent job voicing the many different first-person accounts. Whether reading the accounts of Cassie's assistant, an aging stud or the Cassie's presumptive abandoned son, McLaren finds a complementary voice for each and keeps them consistent throughout. Given the raunchy discussions of sex and the sinister elements that are often associated with the porn industry, McLaren's gritty voice adds the needed edge to this seedy but interesting novel. A Doubleday hardcover (Reviews, Feb. 11). (May) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved All rights reserved.
Booklist Review
Palahniuk has made a career out of exploring alienation and depicting sex addicts, suicides, serial killers, and suffering artists. So it's not surprising to learn that his new novel is set in the sad world of sex cinema. Aging porn legend Cassie Wright is making one last film, a record-setting gang bang in which she will copulate with 600 men. But, as the title foreshadows, the grotesque simulation of love will prove fatal for someone. As with Rant (2007), Palahniuk employs an oral-history format, with the story recollected by three men Messrs. 72, 137, and 600 and Ms. Wright's handler, Sheila. (These passages are obviously very explicit, and not only does the porn not look pretty, the Palahniukian prose may cause readers' interest in all sex to flag for a while.) While Palahniuk's strengths acerbic humor and bold ideas are present here, his weaknesses are, too: indistinct voices and characterizations, repetitiveness, and research that's not integrated but quoted from one character to another. That said, he's an original, and there is something heady about the risks he takes as a writer. But, ultimately, his ideas are more interesting than his writing some readers are bound to ask why they're hanging around someone who keeps beating them up.--Graff, Keir Copyright 2008 Booklist
New York Review of Books Review
In Chuck Palahniuk's latest, a porn star wants to perform with 600 men. WHAT the hell is going on? The country that produced Melville, Twain and James now venerates King, Crichton, Grisham, Sebold and Palahniuk. Their subjects? Porn, crime, pop culture and an endless parade of out-of-body experiences. Their methods? Cliché, caricature and proto-Christian morality. Props? Corn chips, corpses, crucifixes. The agenda? Deceit: a dishonest throwing of the reader to the wolves. And the result? Readymade Hollywood scripts. So not only has America tried to ruin the rest of the world with its wars, its financial meltdown and its stupid stupid food, it has allowed its own literary culture to implode. Jazz and patchwork quilts are still doing O.K., but books have descended into kitsch. I blame capitalism, Puritanism, philistinism, television and the computer. Chuck Palahniuk has his uses as a shock jock: 73 people (according to him) have fainted during public readings of his short story "Guts." A riotous account of some disastrous underwater onanism involving a swimmirig-pool drain, that story excellently delineates the shallowness of American life. But his latest novel, "Snuff," the dry-as-dust tale of people making a documentary about a woman who wants to break (as the promotional copy delicately puts it) "the world record for serial fornication," is not so much shallow as bitter. Whatever point Palahniuk meant to make seems to have been lost in a self-induced miasma of meaninglessness - onanism of a more dispiriting sort. Told primarily from the perspective of three participants, Mr. 72, Mr. 137 and Mr. 600, most of the action takes place in a vast hall where hundreds of men in their underpants plow through junk food and Viagra. All 600 of them have volunteered to spend the day sharing one woman and one toilet. It sounds like an athlete's foot bonanza! But that's show business. On the plus side, the men have been certified free of venereal disease. Nothing to worry about then - except that this is the bottom of the barrel Palahniuk has chosen to scrape. He even dares to make a Melville-related joke (inevitably, I guess) based on the name of the whale. Not wise: Palahniuk's banality makes the Pequod smell pretty sweet. This novel reeks not of lust but of the lamp, with many a discharge of nerdy info on everything from cyanide poisoning, Claudius' wife Messalina, vibrators, defibrillators, gangsta tattoos and Hitler's inflatable Aryan sex doll to flutters and intercourse-induced embolisms: stuff most 10-year-olds know - or could Google. There is a running gag (to which the reader's response may be to gag and run) about porn film titles, only a few of which - "Gropes of Wrath," "Beat Me in St. Louis," "Lady Windermere's Fanny" - can be mentioned here. Some don't even attempt to be clever. "Inside Miss Jean Brody" sounds like a title suggested by a newly arrived Martian. Is this what passes for invention these days? Do Palahniuk's readers chortle at such things? Have they no pride? There's a glaring absence of finesse. A paragraph-long description of difficulty with excretory hygiene is offered by one "dude" as an analogy for a bad day, then repeated almost word for word at the end of the book. It's not that great an analogy. The telegraphing of the denouement is also out of control, with one allusion after another to genetic links between the star and the people servicing her: a baby was given up for adoption many years before. One possible "son," the confused Mr. 72, has been perving for years all over a pocket-size rubber edition of her vulva. Revulsion is expressed indiscriminately: Palahniuk is contemptuous of everything and everybody! Including, I suspect, us. The people in this novel don't merely speak in clichés, their every action is clichéd. It's as if, like some grumpy groundhog, Palahniuk has come out of his burrow only to tell us he has nothing to say - unless it's that porn has ruined sex. But we knew that already. The floppy plot seeks refuge in cosmetic tips and movie trivia, with a pretty obscene focus on actors who came to grief, if not death, while filming some picture or other. If this catalog of corporeal catastrophe is supposed to justify snuff movies, it fails. The trouble with snuff movies is that the wrong people die. The risk in objecting to all this is that you look like a fuddy-duddy. But the problem is not the moral turpitude that Palahniuk pretends to promote or tolerate; the problem is his lack of artistry. He has allowed the failings of the culture he criticizes to infect his own work. The feeble irony employed here isn't up to the job of processing all the detritus he hurls at us. Who will de-trite us now? Instead of any real creative effort, Palahniuk chucks at us every bit of porno-talk he can muster. But not in a good way. This is no celebration of a field in which America excels - the hatching of new vocabulary - but an exercise in deadening the English language. Johnny One-Note, this book is shooting blanks. Alienation is soooooo 20th century. Lucy Ellmann's most recent novel is "Doctors & Nurses."
Guardian Review
In an interview promoting his new novel, Chuck Palahniuk - whose best-known work to date is Fight Club, an interesting book which became a more interesting film - was asked his opinion of Martin Amis. Dismissing Amis as the author of "beautifully padded sentences", Palahniuk opined: "We're living in a different world than Charles Dickens lived in . . . My perception is that my readers just don't have that kind of patience. They're a lot more sophisticated." And I thought that contemporary audience impatience was driven by an immature need for instant gratification, when all the while it was actually sophistication. How complicated of us. Unfortunately, whatever high opinions of his readers Palahniuk may hold, the novel he has produced for them owes much to impatience, and little to sophistication. It reads as though it was produced in one burst of energy over the course of a long weekend; although this has the advantage of making it a fast read, a book that so insistently demands skimming can only be superficial. In fact, skimming is about the only demand upon the reader that Snuff makes; it does everything else for you, and it is pointless to try reading it any other way. Its repetitiveness ensures that anything you missed the first time round will inevitably recur, up to and including an opening passage suggesting that the experience to come will be like being smeared with your own excrement, an all-too-accurate prediction which is repeated verbatim at the end. So much for us sophisticated readers, who will be shocked (shocked!) to learn that pornography is defiling. The passage was probably meant as a joke, but as I've never found faeces funny, I can't be sure. There is more potential for humour in the novel's donnee, the story of Annabel Chong, the University of Southern California student who in 1995 set the gold standard for post-feminist inconsistency by breaking the world record for gang bangs in the name of women's empowerment. This is certainly a position worthy of satire - and if Palahniuk had focused on a character like Chong, and really plumbed the depths of her contradictions and complicity, he might have produced a biting parody of our oxymoronic sexual politics. But there is no satire here, only snickering. Snuff tells the story, in its opening narrator's words, of "Six hundred dudes. One porn queen. A world record for the ages. A must-have movie for every discerning collector of things erotic. Didn't one of us on purpose set out to make a snuff movie." This is the voice of Mr 600, an aging, washed-up male porn star called Branch Bacardi who has a history with Cassie Wright, the porn queen who has decided to go out with a bang - which is the level of witticism on display. All 600 men, anonymously numbered, are awaiting their 60 seconds with the former porn queen by milling about the green room in their underwear, slathering themselves with fake tan, popping Viagra, and watching TV monitors looping Cassie's back catalogue - including such "classics" as Chitty Chitty Gang Bang , Guess Who's Coming at Dinner , Slut on a Hot Tin Roof , and scores of others. The story, such as it is, shifts between Mr 600, Mr 72, a young man obsessed with Cassie who may or may not be her long-lost son, Mr 137, a former TV star whose career was destroyed by the revelation that he once performed in a gay porn film ( Three Days of the Condom ), and Sheila, the stage manager and stud "wrangler" who provides the novel's cynical post-feminist voice: "All that today comes down to is free trade. Do you restrict a person's ability to earn income and exercise personal power? Do you restrict their behavior in order to prevent them from possibly being hurt? What about race-car drivers? Rodeo bull-riders? These chicken-chokers. Didn't bother to read any feminist theory beyond that outdated Andrea Dworkin tripe. Nothing sex-positive. Nothing along the lines of Naomi Wolf. I come, therefore I am . . . No, whether a woman is a concu bine to fuck or a damsel to redeem, she's always just some passive object to fulfill a man's purpose." For starters, in what universe do male porn stars read Andrea Dworkin? All the novel's attempts at analysis are similarly unthinking. Instead of wrestling with the real, if caricatured, moral complexities of his situation, Palahniuk exercises his mental powers in producing more synonyms for masturbators and increasingly tiresome porn titles. All the characters, including Cassie Wright, are mired in self-loathing, which, while certainly justifiable, is equally tiresome. Nor is all the cynicism redeemed by an ending which tries to be bathetic and touching at the same time. This is an emotionally coy novel which raises painful social issues - not just pornography, but rape, child abuse, exploitation and incest - only to jeer. At best these are token gestures towards the squalid realities of the porn industry, and our increasingly pornographic society. To give Palahniuk credit, at least he doesn't defend porn, which puts him above the Annabel Chongs of the world. He may not think porn is empowering, but he doesn't bother to decide whether he should deride, excoriate or pity its purveyors, and so produces a novel that is almost as befuddled and dreary as the world it mocks. Sarah Churchwell is a senior lecturer in American literature and culture at the University of East Anglia. To order Snuff for pounds 11.99 with free UK p&p call Guardian book service on 0870 836 0875. Caption: article-palahniuk.1 In an interview promoting his new novel, Chuck Palahniuk - whose best-known work to date is Fight Club, an interesting book which became a more interesting film - was asked his opinion of Martin Amis. Dismissing Amis as the author of "beautifully padded sentences", Palahniuk opined: "We're living in a different world than Charles Dickens lived in . . . My perception is that my readers just don't have that kind of patience. They're a lot more sophisticated." And I thought that contemporary audience impatience was driven by an immature need for instant gratification, when all the while it was actually sophistication. How complicated of us. Snuff tells the story, in its opening narrator's words, of "Six hundred dudes. One porn queen. A world record for the ages. A must-have movie for every discerning collector of things erotic. Didn't one of us on purpose set out to make a snuff movie." This is the voice of Mr 600, an aging, washed-up male porn star called Branch Bacardi who has a history with Cassie Wright, the porn queen who has decided to go out with a bang - which is the level of witticism on display. All 600 men, anonymously numbered, are awaiting their 60 seconds with the former porn queen by milling about the green room in their underwear, slathering themselves with fake tan, popping Viagra, and watching TV monitors looping Cassie's back catalogue - including such "classics" as Chitty Chitty Gang Bang , Guess Who's Coming at Dinner , Slut on a Hot Tin Roof , and scores of others. - Sarah Churchwell.
Library Journal Review
A porn star's endeavor to service 600 men on-camera, as told by (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Excerpts
Excerpts
1 Mr. 600 One dude stood all afternoon at the buffet wearing just his boxers, licking the orange dust off barbecued potato chips. Next to him, a dude was scooping into the onion dip and licking the dip off the chip. The same soggy chip, scoop after scoop. Dudes have a million ways of peeing on what they claim as just their own. For craft services, we're talking two folding tables piled with open bags of store-brand corn chips and canned sodas. Dudes getting called back to do their bit--the wrangler announces their numbers, and these performers stroll back for their money shot still chewing a mouthful of caramel corn, their fingers burning with garlic salt and sticky with the frosting from maple bars. Some one-shot dudes, they're just here to say they were. Us veterans, we're here for the face time and to do Cassie a favor. Help her one more dick toward that world record. To witness history. On the buffet, they got laid out Tupperwares full of condoms next to Tupperwares of mini-pretzels. Fun-sized candy bars. Honey-roasted peanuts. On the floor, plastic wrappers from candy bars and condoms, bit and chewed open. The same hands scooping M&M's as reaching into the fly and elastic waistband of boxers to stroke their half-hard dicks. Candy-colored fingers. Tangy ranch-flavored erections. Peanut breath. Root-beer breath. Barbecued-potato-chip breath getting panted into Cassie's face. Tweakers scratching their arms bright red. High-school virgins wanting to lose it on camera. This one kid, Mr. 72, is looking to get deflowered and into history in the same shot. Skinny dudes keeping their T-shirts on, shirts older than some other performers here, sent out for the launch of Sex with the City a lifetime ago. Fan-club shirts from back when Cassie was starring in Lust Horizons . T-shirts older than Mr. 72, silk-screened before he was born. Loud dudes talk on cell phones, talking stock options and ground-floor opportunities at the same time they pinch and milk their foreskins. All the performers, the wrangler Magic Marker-ed their biceps with a number between one and six hundred. Their haircuts, a monument to gel and patience. Tans and fogs of cologne. The room full of metal folding chairs. To set the mood, dog-eared skin magazines. The talent wrangler is some babe, Sheila, with a clipboard, yelling for number 16, number 31, and number 211 to follow her up the stairway to the set. Dudes wearing tennis shoes. Top-Siders. Bikini briefs. Wingtips with navy-blue calf-high socks held up with those old-time garters. Beach flip-flops still coated with sand, every step gritty with it. That old joke: The way to get a babe to act in a blue movie is you offer her a million dollars. The way to get a dude is you just have to ask him...That's not actually a joke. Not like a ha-ha joke. Except maybe us industry regulars, most of these nobodies saw the ad that ran in the back of Adult Video News . An open casting call. A hard-on and a doctor's release to show you're clean, that was the audition. That, and nobody's shooting kiddie porn, so you had to be eighteen. We got shaved pecs and waxed pubes standing in line with a Downs-syndrome softball team. Asian, black, and spic dudes. A wheelchair dude. Something for every market segment. The kid, dude 72, he's holding a bouquet of white roses starting to curl, droop, the petals slack and starting to brown. The kid's holding out one hand, words written on the back in blue ballpoint pen. Looking at them, the kid goes, "I don't want anything, but I've always loved you..." Other dudes carry around wrapped boxes fluffy with bows and trailing ribbons, boxes small enough to fit in one hand, almost hidden inside their fingers. The veteran talent wear satin bathrobes, prizefighter robes tied with a sash, while they wait their call. Professional woodsmen. Half them even dated Cassie, talked marriage, becoming the Lunts, the Desi and Lucy of adult entertainment. Wasn't a performer at that shoot who didn't love Cassie Wright and want to help her make history. Other dudes ain't dicked anything but their hand, watching nothing but Cassie Wright videos. To them, it's a kind-of fidelity. A marriage. These dudes, clutching their little gifts, for them today is their kind-of honeymoon. Consummation. Today, her last performance. The opposite of a maiden voyage. Up those stairs, to anybody after the fiftieth dude, Cassie Wright will look like a missile crater greased with Vaseline. Flesh and blood, but like something's exploded inside her. To look at us, you'd never guess we were making history. The record to end all records. The talent wrangler comes around, calling out, "Gentlemen." The Sheila babe pushes the glasses up her nose and goes, "When I call you, you'll need to be camera-ready." By that she means fully erect. Condom-ready. The closest thing that comes to how the day felt is when you wipe back to front. You're on the toilet. You're not thinking, and you smear shit on the back of your hanging-down wrinkled ball skin. The more you try to wipe it clean, the skin stretches and the mess keeps getting bigger. The thin layer of shit spreads into the hair and down your thighs. That's how a day like this, how it feels to keep secret. Six hundred dudes. One porn queen. A world record for the ages. A must-have movie for every discerning collector of things erotic. Didn't one of us on purpose set out to make a snuff movie. 2 Mr. 72 It was a lamebrainplan, bringing roses. I don't know. The first step inside the door, they give you a brown paper shopping bag with a number written on the side, some number between one and six hundred. They say, "Put your clothes in here, kid." And they give you a wood clothespin with the same number in black pen. They say, "Clip it to your shorts. Don't lose it or you won't get your stuff back." The crew girl, she wears a stopwatch on a cord, hanging on her chest where her heart would be. Taped to the wall behind the table where you undress, they got a sign done in the same black pen, on brown paper; it says how the production company isn't responsible for anybody's valuables. Another sign they got says "No Masks Allowed." Some bags, guys put their shoes in with a sock balled inside each. Their belt coiled tight and nested in one shoe. Their pants folded, the creases matched, and laid on top the shoes. Their shirts tucked under their chin while they match up the arms and fold the collar and tails so as to make the least wrinkles. Their undershirt, folded. Their necktie rolled and tucked in a pocket of their suit jacket. Guys with good clothes. Other guys pull off their jeans or sweatpants, balled up, inside out. Their T-shirts or sweatshirts. They peel off their damp underwear, and stuff it into the bags, then on top they drop their stinking tennis shoes. After you undress, the stopwatch girl takes your bag of clothes and puts it on the floor, against the concrete wall. Everybody, they're standing around in their shorts, juggling their wallets and car keys, cell phones, and whatnot. Me bringing a bouquet of roses, wilting and all, more junk to juggle, it was just plain stupid. Getting undressed, I was unbuttoning my shirt, and the stopwatch girl giving out paper bags, she points at my chest and says, "You planning to wear that on camera?" She's holding a bag marked with the number "72." The clothespin clipped to one paper handle. My number. The stopwatch girl points her gun finger at my chest, and she says, "That." Tucking my chin, I look down until it hurts, but all I can see is my crucifix on the gold chain around my neck. I ask if that's a problem. A crucifix. And the girl reaches out with the clothespin, squeezing it open. She jabs to pinch it on my nipple, but I pull back. She says, "We've been doing this a long time." She says, "We know to look out for you Bible thumpers." From her face, she could be a high-schooler, about my age. The stopwatch girl says how the actress Candy Apples, when she set her record with 721 sex acts, they used the same group of fifty men for the entire production. That was in 1996, and Candy only stopped because the LAPD raided the studio and shut down the production. She says, "True fact." When Annabel Chong set her early record, the stopwatch girl says, performing 251 sex acts, even with eighty men showing up for the cattle call, some 66 percent of them couldn't get their dicks hard enough to do their job. That same year, 1996, Jasmin St. Claire broke Chong's record with three hundred sex acts in a single shoot. Spantaneeus Xtasy broke the record with 551. In the year 2000, the actress Sabrina Johnson took on two thousand men, fucking until she hurt so bad the crew had to pack ice between her legs as she sucked off the remainder of the cast. After her royalty checks started to bounce, Johnson went public with the news that her record was bogus. At most, she'd done five hundred sex acts, and instead of two thousand men, only thirty-nine had answered the casting call. The stopwatch girl points at the crucifix, saying, "Don't try to save anybody's soul here." The next guy down the table, he pulls off a black T-shirt, his head and arms and chest the same even suntan brown. A ring shines gold, hanging from one nipple. His chest hair lies flat, every hair cropped down to the same stubble size. Looking at me, he says, "Hey, buddy..." He says, "Don't save her soul before they call me for my close-up, okay?" And he winks big enough to wrinkle half his face around one eye. His eyelashes big enough to fan a breeze. Up close, he's smoothed a layer of pink all over his forehead and cheeks. Three colors of brown powder around his eyes, folded into the little wrinkles there. Clamped under one arm, between his elbow and tanned ribs, the guy holds a wad of white, maybe more clothes. On the other side of the table, the stopwatch girl turns her head to look both ways. She stuffs a hand into one front pocket of her blue jeans, asking me, "Hey, preacher, you want to buy some insurance?" The girl fishes out a little bottle, big around as a test tube, but shorter. She shakes the bottle to rattle some blue pills inside. "Ten bucks each," she says, and shakes the blue pills next to her face. "Don't you be part of that sixty-six percent." The guy wearing makeup, the stopwatch girl hands him a bag numbered "137," saying, "You want the teddy bear should go in your bag?" She nods toward the white bundle under the guy's elbow. Guy 137 whips the wad of white clothing from under his arm, saying, "Mr. Toto is nothing so pedestrian as a teddy bear_._._." He says, "Mr. Toto is an autograph hound." He kisses it, saying, "You wouldn't believe how old." The stuffed animal is sewed out of white canvas, a long wiener-dog body with, sticking down, four stubby white canvas legs. Stitched on the top, a dog head with black button eyes and floppy canvas ears. Crabbed all over the white canvas is writing, blue, black, and red pen handwriting. Some loopy letters, some block letters. Some with dates. Numbers. A day, month, and year. Where the guy kissed it, the dog's smeared red with lipstick. He holds the dog in the crook of one arm, the way they'd hold a baby. With his other hand, the guy points out writing. Signatures. Autographs. Carol Channing, he shows us. Bette Midler. Debbie Reynolds. Carole Baker. Tina Turner. "Mr. Toto," he says, "is older than I myself would ever admit to being." Still holding the bottle of blue pills, the stopwatch girl says, "You want Miss Wright should autograph your dog?" Cassie Wright, the guy tells us, is his all-time favorite adult star. Her level of craft soars above her peers. Guy 137, he says how Cassie Wright spent six months shadowing an endocrinologist, learning his duties, studying his demeanor and body language, before playing a doctor in the groundbreaking adult feature Emergency Room Back Door Dog Pile . Cassie Wright spent six months of research, writing to survivors and studying court documents, before she set foot on the set for the adult mega-epic Titanic Back Door Dog Pile . In her single line of dialogue, the moment Cassie Wright says, "This boat's not the only lady going down, tonight..." her west-country Irish accent is dead-on, depicting exactly how hot the steerage free-for-all sex must've been in the final moments of man's worst sea disaster. "In Emergency Room ," he says, "in the lesbian scene with the two hot laboratory assistants, it's obvious that Cassie Wright is the only performer who knows the correct way to work a speculum." The critics, guy 137 says, justifiably raved about her portrayal of Mary Todd Lincoln in the Civil War epic Ford's Theatre Back Door Dog Pile . Later re-released as Private Box . Later re-released as Presidential Box . Guy 137 tells us, in the scene where Cassie Wright gets double-teamed by John Wilkes Booth and Honest Abe Lincoln, thanks to her research, she truly does make American history come alive. Still cradling his canvas dog, its black button eyes against his gold nipple-ring, the guy says, "How much for your pills?" "Ten bucks," says the stopwatch girl. "No," the guy says. He stuffs the dog back under his arm and reaches around to his back pants pocket. Taking out his wallet, he pinches out twenty, forty, a hundred dollars, saying, "I mean, how much for the entire bottle?" The stopwatch girl says, "Lean over so I can write your number on your arm." And guy 137 winks at me again, his big eye looking bigger inside all that brown powder, and he says, "You brought roses." He says, "How sweet is that?" From the Hardcover edition. Excerpted from Snuff by Chuck Palahniuk All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.