Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. American Psycho es una novela impactante escrita por Bret Easton Ellis que narra la vida de Patrick Bateman, un joven y apuesto banquero de inversiones que lleva una vida superficial y llena de excesos en la ciudad de Nueva York en la década de 1980. Sin embargo, detrás de su fachada de hombre exitoso y adinerado, se esconde un psicópata ...

  2. American Psycho (2000) is based on Bret Easton Ellis’s controversial 1991 novel of the same name, and details the exploits of investment banker/serial killer Patrick Bateman (Christian Bale). Upon its release, notable feminists such as Gloria Steinem opposed the depicted violence towards women, and the graphic content was so disturbing that several countries established restrictions for ...

  3. 8 de dic. de 2022 · American Psycho is a novel by Bret Easton Ellis, published in 1991. The story is told in the first person by Patrick Bateman, a serial killer and Manhattan investment banker. Alison Kelly of The Observer notes that while "some countries [deem it] so potentially disturbing that it can only be sold shrink-wrapped", "critics rave about it" and ...

  4. American Psycho begins with a quote from Dante’s Inferno: “ Abandon all hope ye who enter here ” is graffitied across the side of a bank in blood-red paint. It is the late 1980s in New York city. The reader is introduced to the novel’s narrator, Patrick Bateman, a 27-year-old Wall Street investment banker.Bateman, who relays the action of the novel, as well as his innermost thoughts ...

  5. 6 de mar. de 1991 · Bret Easton Ellis. 3.81. 316,047 ratings19,442 reviews. Patrick Bateman is twenty-six and works on Wall Street. He is handsome, sophisticated, charming and intelligent. He is also a psychopath. Taking us to head-on collision with America's greatest dream—and its worst nightmare—American Psycho is a bleak, bitter, black comedy about a world ...

  6. American Psycho was originally slated to be published by Simon & Schuster. However in November of 1990, the company, citing “aesthetic differences,” dropped the book over its graphic and misogynistic content. Bret Easton Ellis got to keep the money anyway. Later that year, it was picked up and published by Vintage Books.