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May I never be complete.
May I never be content.
 May I never be perfect.
             ©Chuck Palahniuk
“STRANGER THAN FICTION”
    People prefer to live their lives rightly. They
         try to make everything seem normal.

    But the man this presentation is devoted to
                       clearly isn`t one of them.

      In his life truth is sometimes stranger than
        fiction. His biography is far from perfect,
   albeit it is interesting. It is hard to tell exactly
          where reality ends and the storytelling
                                                begins.

      He came from the humble beginnings and
       made people live vicariously through his
                                        stories.
This is the story
about Charles Michael Palahniuk,
              the man
    who transformed his wounds
            into his art.
SOME FACTS
Born February 21, 1962, Charles spent his early childhood living out of a
mobile home in Burbank, Washington.

His paternal grandfather was Ukrainian and immigrated to New York from
Canada in 1907.

His parents, Carol and Fred Palahniuk, separated and divorced when he
was fourteen.

Chuck and his siblings spent much of their time on their maternal
grandparent’s cattle ranch.

In 1980 Charles graduated from Columbia High School in Burbank.

The catalyst for his first writing was his fifth grade teacher Mr. Olsen.
“Chuck, you do this really well.
 And this is much better than
  setting fires, so keep it up.”
            Mr. Olsen, 5th grade teacher
journalist   After high school, Chuck attended the University of
             Oregon, graduating with a BA in journalism in 1986. He
    &        entered the workforce as a journalist for a local Portland
             newspaper, but soon grew tired of the job.

  diesel     He then gained employment as a diesel mechanic,
             spending his days repairing trucks and writing technical
 mechanic    manuals.




             It was during this time that Palahniuk performed
             volunteer work for a homeless shelter; later, he also
             volunteered at a hospice as an escort; he provided
volunteer    transportation for terminally ill people and brought
             them to support group meetings.
    &        He also became a member of the notorious
  rebel      Cacophony Society. The Cacophony Society was
             dedicated to experiencing things outside of the
             mainstream and performing large-scale pranks in public
             places.
Palahniuk began writing
fiction in his mid-thirties.
At the time he was
attending workshops for
writers to meet new
friends. Tom Spanbauer,
the host, largely inspired
Palahniuk's minimalistic
writing style.
Chuck’s first attempt at a novel, If You Lived Here, You’d be Home Already
 was rejected across the board (although parts were later recycled for use
in Fight Club.) Unfazed, Chuck dabbled with even darker material, writing a
    manuscript called Manifesto, which would go on to become Invisible
 Monsters. As with If You Lived Here, agents just couldn't embrace the dark
tone in Chuck's work, and while his voice as a writer got some recognition,
                 nobody was willing to take a chance on him.
“Our real discoveries
come from chaos, from
 going to the place that
looks wrong and stupid
     and foolish.”
     (Invisible Monsters)
That all changed when Chuck "gave up" on
the mainstream and decided to make his
next manuscript even darker. The experience of
working in terminally ill hospice and becoming
a member of the Cacophony Society was the
basis.

   Fight Club came into existence.

After initially publishing it as a short
story (which would become chapter 6 of the
novel) in the 1995 compilation, Pursuit of
Happiness, Palahniuk expanded it into a
full    novel,   which—contrary   to   his
expectations—the publisher was willing to
publish.

But it wasn't until 20th Century Fox took notice
that Chuck nabbed an agent in Edward Hibbert
(best known as Gil Chesterton, the food critic
on Frasier,) who would go on to broker the
deal for Fight Club the movie.
Due to this success, Chuck was given free reign, creatively.
Chuck’s work has always been
        infused with personal
       experience, and his next
        novel, Lullaby, was no
      exception. Chuck credits
     writing Lullaby with helping
    him cope with the tragic death
             of his father.


In the year 1999 Chuck`s father, Fred Palahniuk, had
started dating a woman named Donna Fontaine. He
met her trough a personal ad soon after her former
boyfriend, Dale Shackleford, had been imprisoned for
sexual abuse. Shackleford had vowed to kill Fontaine
as soon as he was released from prison. After his
release, Shackleford followed Fontaine and the senior
Palahniuk to Fontaine's home after they had gone out
for a date. Shackleford then shot them both and
dragged their bodies into Fontaine's cabin home,
which he then set afire. That man was found guilty
and sentenced to death in 2001.
“That's why I write,
because life never
works except in
retrospect. You can't
control life, at least you
can control your
version.”
      (Stranger Than Fiction)
Another book, based on personal
experience, was released in 2011.
Chuck wrote Damned while his
mother was dying of cancer.
She was the prototype of the main character, 13-year-old
girl Madison who is in Hell. “On her medication my
mother became much more herself as a child; a child I
never would have known. I was playing in effect the role
of parent. It was a terrible time and perhaps that's why
Madison's such a glib person. She's covering up horrible
circumstances and pain”-says Chuck.

He tried to express somehow his grief at having then lost
both of his parents. That would not make a very
entertaining or particularly funny book, that`s why he
inverted the situation and made it this very plucky dead
child, who could mourn her parents while they were still
on Earth – but still she could miss them.
“We all die. The goal isn't to live
forever, the goal is to create
something that will.”
                             (Diary)




  Charles Palahniuk
 managed to find his
  inspiration in his
   misery. The art
  cured him. And I
 believe that his way
  can help anybody.
       Do you?
WEBLIOGRAPHY
•   http://chuckpalahniuk.net/author/bio
•   http://www.list.co.uk/article/1902-american-literature/
•   http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2011/sep/04/chuck-palahniuk-fight-
    club-interview
•   http://www.goodreads.com/author/quotes/2546.Chuck_Palahniuk?page
    =3
•   http://www.notable-quotes.com/p/palahniuk_chuck.html
•   http://www.flickr.com/photos/
•   http://topics.nytimes.com/topics/reference/timestopics/people/p/chuck
    _palahniuk/index.html
•   http://www.stirrings-still.org/ss22.pdf




                                      Made by Maria Alexandrova, RIMO-201

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Charles Palahniuk presentation

  • 1. May I never be complete. May I never be content. May I never be perfect. ©Chuck Palahniuk
  • 2. “STRANGER THAN FICTION” People prefer to live their lives rightly. They try to make everything seem normal. But the man this presentation is devoted to clearly isn`t one of them. In his life truth is sometimes stranger than fiction. His biography is far from perfect, albeit it is interesting. It is hard to tell exactly where reality ends and the storytelling begins. He came from the humble beginnings and made people live vicariously through his stories.
  • 3. This is the story about Charles Michael Palahniuk, the man who transformed his wounds into his art.
  • 4. SOME FACTS Born February 21, 1962, Charles spent his early childhood living out of a mobile home in Burbank, Washington. His paternal grandfather was Ukrainian and immigrated to New York from Canada in 1907. His parents, Carol and Fred Palahniuk, separated and divorced when he was fourteen. Chuck and his siblings spent much of their time on their maternal grandparent’s cattle ranch. In 1980 Charles graduated from Columbia High School in Burbank. The catalyst for his first writing was his fifth grade teacher Mr. Olsen.
  • 5. “Chuck, you do this really well. And this is much better than setting fires, so keep it up.” Mr. Olsen, 5th grade teacher
  • 6. journalist After high school, Chuck attended the University of Oregon, graduating with a BA in journalism in 1986. He & entered the workforce as a journalist for a local Portland newspaper, but soon grew tired of the job. diesel He then gained employment as a diesel mechanic, spending his days repairing trucks and writing technical mechanic manuals. It was during this time that Palahniuk performed volunteer work for a homeless shelter; later, he also volunteered at a hospice as an escort; he provided volunteer transportation for terminally ill people and brought them to support group meetings. & He also became a member of the notorious rebel Cacophony Society. The Cacophony Society was dedicated to experiencing things outside of the mainstream and performing large-scale pranks in public places.
  • 7. Palahniuk began writing fiction in his mid-thirties. At the time he was attending workshops for writers to meet new friends. Tom Spanbauer, the host, largely inspired Palahniuk's minimalistic writing style.
  • 8. Chuck’s first attempt at a novel, If You Lived Here, You’d be Home Already was rejected across the board (although parts were later recycled for use in Fight Club.) Unfazed, Chuck dabbled with even darker material, writing a manuscript called Manifesto, which would go on to become Invisible Monsters. As with If You Lived Here, agents just couldn't embrace the dark tone in Chuck's work, and while his voice as a writer got some recognition, nobody was willing to take a chance on him.
  • 9. “Our real discoveries come from chaos, from going to the place that looks wrong and stupid and foolish.” (Invisible Monsters)
  • 10. That all changed when Chuck "gave up" on the mainstream and decided to make his next manuscript even darker. The experience of working in terminally ill hospice and becoming a member of the Cacophony Society was the basis. Fight Club came into existence. After initially publishing it as a short story (which would become chapter 6 of the novel) in the 1995 compilation, Pursuit of Happiness, Palahniuk expanded it into a full novel, which—contrary to his expectations—the publisher was willing to publish. But it wasn't until 20th Century Fox took notice that Chuck nabbed an agent in Edward Hibbert (best known as Gil Chesterton, the food critic on Frasier,) who would go on to broker the deal for Fight Club the movie.
  • 11. Due to this success, Chuck was given free reign, creatively.
  • 12. Chuck’s work has always been infused with personal experience, and his next novel, Lullaby, was no exception. Chuck credits writing Lullaby with helping him cope with the tragic death of his father. In the year 1999 Chuck`s father, Fred Palahniuk, had started dating a woman named Donna Fontaine. He met her trough a personal ad soon after her former boyfriend, Dale Shackleford, had been imprisoned for sexual abuse. Shackleford had vowed to kill Fontaine as soon as he was released from prison. After his release, Shackleford followed Fontaine and the senior Palahniuk to Fontaine's home after they had gone out for a date. Shackleford then shot them both and dragged their bodies into Fontaine's cabin home, which he then set afire. That man was found guilty and sentenced to death in 2001.
  • 13. “That's why I write, because life never works except in retrospect. You can't control life, at least you can control your version.” (Stranger Than Fiction)
  • 14. Another book, based on personal experience, was released in 2011. Chuck wrote Damned while his mother was dying of cancer. She was the prototype of the main character, 13-year-old girl Madison who is in Hell. “On her medication my mother became much more herself as a child; a child I never would have known. I was playing in effect the role of parent. It was a terrible time and perhaps that's why Madison's such a glib person. She's covering up horrible circumstances and pain”-says Chuck. He tried to express somehow his grief at having then lost both of his parents. That would not make a very entertaining or particularly funny book, that`s why he inverted the situation and made it this very plucky dead child, who could mourn her parents while they were still on Earth – but still she could miss them.
  • 15. “We all die. The goal isn't to live forever, the goal is to create something that will.” (Diary) Charles Palahniuk managed to find his inspiration in his misery. The art cured him. And I believe that his way can help anybody. Do you?
  • 16. WEBLIOGRAPHY • http://chuckpalahniuk.net/author/bio • http://www.list.co.uk/article/1902-american-literature/ • http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2011/sep/04/chuck-palahniuk-fight- club-interview • http://www.goodreads.com/author/quotes/2546.Chuck_Palahniuk?page =3 • http://www.notable-quotes.com/p/palahniuk_chuck.html • http://www.flickr.com/photos/ • http://topics.nytimes.com/topics/reference/timestopics/people/p/chuck _palahniuk/index.html • http://www.stirrings-still.org/ss22.pdf Made by Maria Alexandrova, RIMO-201