Of the thirteen novels Palahniuk has penned I have read 8, more than half of them, I have read all but one of his novels since Haunted, and the one I missed as a revision of an earlier novel. So I can say that I am somewhat fluent in his work, and a fan, most of the novels are great, some of them are pretty good, this one however is by far his worst.
The language of a thirteen year old girl may be construed by some as clever but in practice it is just annoying. The “refrains” or repetitive lines that run throughout the novel (a mainstay in minimalist writing) are tedious, as opposed to interesting.
So language failed, how about story? The story is supposed to be a sequel to the novel Damned, and yes the story does continue onward from there, as we the readers were left at the end of that novel to want to know what happens next, however only about 10% of the novel is about that story itself. 70% of the novel tells the background story of the main character which we already though had been pretty well covered in the first book, and although new information is presented, it’s boring, mired in lowbrow terminology and concluded with lowbrow shock that serves little external purpose (which is a common flaw others have had with his earlier “jumped the shark” novel Snuff). Another 10% covers the detailed description of the coalescing of plastic waste in the ocean (which to the author’s credit is explained, though perhaps too much detail is given on the topic). And the last 10% of the novel is taken up by the various refrains.
Language: Fail, Story: Fail, Characters? Damned, which was still not one of his better novels, did have a rich cast of characters: from Breakfast Club-Esq teenagers to Ancient Daemons. The Sequel however left out all those teenagers, referencing them only in passing, while focusing primarily on the main character, and secondarily on her parents, and her grandparents. This might be okay, however the main character is not a positive, lovable or relatable character, and there aren’t enough other characters to distract the reader from her as there were in the first novel. All the characters in the novel are portrayed as grotesquely stupid, and yes there is a reason for it, but it is put to such an extreme that it is not believable.
The Novel is a major allegory against modern organized religion, and with that I do not disagree, that is not at all what offended me about this novel, it’s simply the bad writing, mixed with the 2 year wait to find out what happened next only to have to read through page after page of more background. A lot of the ideology was already covered in Palahniuk’s short story “Obsolete” but that story was much more successful. I’m giving the novel 3 stars because it is not going to make me stop reading his works in the future, and yes I will read the third book in this trilogy when it comes out, weather I like it or not will remain to be seen.