A rabid new novel from "Fight Club" author Palahniuk
By: Colin Williams
Issue date: 9/28/07 Section: The Arts
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This being said, I didn't quite know what to expect from Palahniuk's latest release, "Rant." The story is set up as an oral biography of Buster "Rant" Casey, a fictional small-town kid with a ridiculous sense of smell and the bizarre habit of willingly being bitten by all kinds of poisonous animals. Through the many "interviews" with the people in Rant's life, it is revealed fairly quickly that he is responsible for something of a rabies epidemic, and that he is dead.
One of the stranger points of the novel is its being set in the seemingly not-to-distant future, where most people have ports on the back of their necks to "boost peaks," which is an all-senses-go replacement for movies and TV. People in this future are, for reasons of traffic and overcrowding, separated into "daytimers" and "nighttimers," who can only venture out at their designated time. In addition, many nighttimers participate in a weird kind of sport called "party crashing," where decorated cars drive around and smash into each other for fun. And this is where Rant eventually gets his kicks-party crashing with a ragtag group of people, one of whom is a prostitute with a crippled arm who becomes his girlfriend.
Sound weird yet?
It gets even stranger-without ruining the ending, I will tell you that much of the final quarter or so of the book deals heavily with time travel, and things get kind of spacey as people find ways to mess with the past.
The book is more solidly written than I would have expected. The oral biography style helps make the book interesting, and Palahniuk is decidedly on his game with the flow of the narrative, keeping the reader guessing without being obnoxious and drawn out. The plot remains relatively strong despite a few digressions. The ongoing rabies epidemic also helps keep things flowing, though it actually plays less of a role than party crashing. In addition, despite its futuristic location, the novel is relatively unhampered by the unnecessary technological details which plague many science fiction works. "Rant" was apparently intended as the first of a futuristic trilogy by Palahniuk, but the setting actually serves to dampen Palahniuk's use of a violent and gory present by giving him something to focus on besides violence, fighting, and sex.
2008 Woodie Awards

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