Charles Michael ‘Chuck’ Palahniuk is a low key American author and freelance journalist, renowned for his award winning novel ‘Fight Club’
@Journalists, Family and Facts
Charles Michael ‘Chuck’ Palahniuk is a low key American author and freelance journalist, renowned for his award winning novel ‘Fight Club’
Chuck Palahniuk born at
He is a regular member of the rebellious ‘Cacophony Society’, reflection of which finds place in both his fictions and non-fictions including his most remarkable novel ‘Fight Club’.
Palahniuk’s father and his father’s girlfriend Donna Fontaine were murdered by her ex-boyfriend Dale Shackleford in May 1999. Palahniuk helped in determining Shackleford’s death sentence.
He is gay and lives in Vancouver, Washington, with his partner of over twenty years, whom he met during his ‘Freightliner’ days.
He was born on February 21, 1962, in Pasco, Washington to Fred Palahniuk and Carol Adele. He is a descendant of Russian, French and Ukrainian ancestry.
His early childhood was spent in Washington in a mobile home in Burbank. His parents separated when he was 14 and thereafter they divorced leaving Chuck and his siblings in the care of Carol’s parents. The children moved to Eastern Washington to stay at the cattle ranch of their maternal grandparents.
He attended the ‘School of Journalism’ at the ‘University of Oregon’, from where he completed his graduation in 1986. While studying in college, he interned at the ‘KLCC’ radio station, a member of the ‘National Public Radio’, at its Eugene office.
After college, he relocated to Portland, Oregon where he had a short stint as a journalist with ‘Oregonian’, a local newspaper. He, however, left journalism in 1988 and totally switched from his field to work as a diesel mechanic with ‘Freightliner’, a job that he would hold till his career as a novelist took off. He made a comeback in journalism only after making a mark as an acclaimed novelist.
He attended workshops of Tom Spanbauer and was inspired by Spanbauer’s minimalistic style of writing and began penning down his own imaginations. While he worked with ‘Freightliner’, he utilised his spare time in writing.
After the publishers refused to publish his novel ‘Invisible Monsters’, he started working on ‘Fight Club’, that went on to become his most notable novel.
Initially ‘Fight Club’ was published as a short story and was included in ‘Pursuit of Happiness’, a compilation published in 1995. Later he developed it into a full-fledged novel, where the short story was included in the 6th chapter, and was published in 1996. Three more editions were published in 1999, 2004 and 2005.
‘Fight Club’ earned him much deserved attention from the ‘20th Century Fox’, following which Edward Hibbert, a literary agent and actor signed him. The novel was adapted into a 1999 film with the same name, directed by David Fincher and starred by Edward Norton and Brad Pitt. The film deal was initiated and executed by Hibbert.
Though in the first weekend of its release, the film charted at number one at the US box office, on the whole it could not garner much success. In 1999 he came out with two more novels, ‘Invisible Monsters’ (revised form) and ‘Survivor.
His novel ‘Fight Club’ shot him to fame after being adapted into a film. It became more popular after its DVD was released. It fetched him the ‘Oregon Book Award for Best Novel’ and the ‘Pacific Northwest Booksellers Association Award’ in 1997. In October 2004, a fighting video game was also made based on the film.
The novel ‘Choke’ emerged as his first ‘New York Times’ bestseller.