Book Details
Description
Podziemny krąg to opowieść o rewolcie, mężczyznach, którzy pragną odzyskać kontrolę nad swoim losem. W miarę jak klub rośnie w siłę, zaczynają pojawiać się pytania o to, co tak naprawdę znaczy być wolnym. To praca, która zmusza do refleksji nad współczesnym światem i granicami, jakie stawiamy sobie sami.
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Reviews
View AllI get it. This book was a cultural nuke when it dropped. Angry men, late capitalism, suppressed identity, consumerism as a slow death—yeah, all that is baked in. And Palahniuk’s writing? Sharp, clipped, pounding like a fist to the face. It feels like a breakdown. But here’s the thing: once you peel back the chaos and the grit, it’s kind of shallow. Tyler Durden might be one of the most misunderstood icons in modern fiction, but that’s partly because Palahniuk lets him be. There’s this smug, edgy tone throughout—like it knows it’s going to get quoted by angry college dudes for the next two decades.And look, it’s not that the themes don’t land. It’s that they’re delivered in this try-hard, performatively nihilistic voice that starts strong and burns out fast. The narrator’s unraveling is compelling for a while, but then it just spins in circles, and Tyler starts sounding less like an anarchist prophet and more like a Tumblr post from 2008.It’s iconic, but it’s messy. Intentionally, sure—but still messy. And it hasn’t aged as cleverly as people pretend. It’s not a guide. It’s a warning. But most people miss that because the book doesn’t really care to clarify. And that’s a problem.