Book cover of Less Than Zero

Book description

NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • The timeless classic from the acclaimed author of American Psycho about the lost generation of 1980s Los Angeles who experienced sex, drugs, and disaffection at too early an age. • The basis for the cult-classic film "Possesses an unnerving air of documentary reality." —The New…

When you buy books, we may earn a commission that helps keep our lights on (or join the rebellion as a member).

Why read it?

8 authors picked Less Than Zero as one of their favorite books. Why do they recommend it?

For me, insight into the extravagant celebrity status-like lives of the characters in this movie is akin to the guilty pleasure of watching reality TV. This book brings out the voyeur in me, giving me permission to explore a perfect example of rich kids gone wild and the horrific consequences of unchecked actions.

I grew up in a lower economic class family surrounded by very wealthy, undisciplined friends, and so many of the characters and decisions hit close to home. I won’t lie; I felt a little better about myself and my own life after I finished reading. Yet, I’ll…

From Leslie's list on beauty does not equal good.

This book is gorgeous. It’s about a group of spoiled-rotten high school friends who have started to drift apart after attending college. There’s an interesting backstory to this novel, too: Ellis wrote the first draft in eight weeks while high on crystal meth (don’t believe me? Read the Rolling Stone interview).

The minimalist prose and haunting theme of how overindulgence leads to chronic emptiness make a nihilistic meditation on excess.

From Ava's list on cool, culty Los Angeles.

“Sentimental” is maybe the last word you’d use to describe Ellis’ fiction, but Less Than Zero is an elegant proof that form needn’t follow function.

For all the sparseness of its language and pitilessness of its characters, there is a profound empathy for its narrator Clay, a pensive college freshman who’s returned home to California for Christmas break. Clay expends no outward moral judgment on the depravity of those who populate his very Gothic Los Angeles, but we come to intuitively understand his reticence as less a disposition than a defense.

It is precisely in how he understates his pain…

From Nash's list on teenage sentimentality.

If you love Less Than Zero...

Ad

Book cover of Killing Me Softly

Killing Me Softly by Elizabeth Revill,

Killing me Softly is the beginning of a fast-paced new series featuring Detective Chief Inspector Allison and Sergeant Mark Stringer who have the chilling task of tracking down a serial killer who is to terrify a city with his bizarre and cold-blooded murders of innocent women.

They are ordinary men…

While I’ve never loved Bret Easton Ellis, even as a writer, I’ve always felt this was by design.

Less Than Zero paints a bleak world where young people with nothing to lose get a crash course on exactly how silly of an idea that is. There’s always something to lose, even in recklessness.

No one imagines their life turning out irrevocably caustic, yet it is a commonality from the protagonists' viewpoint. They don’t know how bad it can be, and neither do we until we see it for ourselves.

The idea of recontextualizing our viewpoint on a character’s worldview has…

From May's list on unfathomable nightmares.

Most people know Brett Easton Ellis as the author behind American Psycho, the brilliant and often misunderstood satire about the nihilism of Wall Street culture. With all the controversy and misconceptions around that book, all too many readers neglect to read his first masterpiece, Less than Zero.

Ellis wrote this book when he was twenty years old, which is an incredible feat. As someone who has seen the corrupt, nihilistic, and cynical world of the rich and dysfunctional from the inside, I find this book to be not only spot on but exceedingly frightening. The world that he…

Living in London under Margaret Thatcher and seemingly permanent grey skies, Ellis’s tale of rich kids in Los Angeles doing little else but fucking, drinking, taking drugs, and hanging out at expensive restaurants and cool parties made me want to sell everything I owned (very little back then) and jump on a plane. I often regret that I didn’t. Ellis’s book captures perfectly the strange mix of manic determination and tranquilised-around-the-edges ennui that I later found so characteristic of Los Angeles.

From Matthew's list on gritty American novels.

If you love Bret Easton Ellis...

Ad

Book cover of Lolita Firestone: A Supernatural Novel

Lolita Firestone by Mike Consol,

Lolita Firestone, struggling Hollywood actress, visits Sedona, Arizona, catches so-called Red Rock Fever and establishes the Center for Cosmic Consciousness. Alas, when small groups of black men from African countries on the U.S. terrorism watchlist come to Sedona to attend the Cosmic Center's weekend workshops, the CIA takes notice and…

I could argue that this is the bleakest horror book on the list, though the horror doesn’t come from your typical tropes. Drug addiction, sex, emptiness, and despair are all present themes here and the way Ellis writes his characters – the way they interact, react, and what they value – is haunting in a way that’s very unique and at times, downright chilling. The end of this book will never leave you.

From Elias' list on that make you feel uncomfortable.

Ok, as I ended the review of the last book with a cliche, I needed to redeem myself by throwing a curveball. While Less Than Zero is not considered a zombie book, one could argue the emotionally and morally dead characters traversing in an environment that is so bleak and without hope, it could be described as apocalyptic, puts this book into the zombie apocalypse genre. I loved how the author includes short stories, sometimes completely unrelated to the characters or plot, in chapters that were so concise that some were only a page long. An outstanding book, which was…

If you love Less Than Zero...

Ad

Book cover of Killing Me Softly

Killing Me Softly by Elizabeth Revill,

Killing me Softly is the beginning of a fast-paced new series featuring Detective Chief Inspector Allison and Sergeant Mark Stringer who have the chilling task of tracking down a serial killer who is to terrify a city with his bizarre and cold-blooded murders of innocent women.

They are ordinary men…

Want books like Less Than Zero?

Our community of 12,000+ authors has personally recommended 100 books like Less Than Zero.

Browse books like Less Than Zero

Book cover of Liar's Poker
Book cover of The Virgin Suicides
Book cover of The Day of the Locust

Share your top 3 reads of 2025!

And get a beautiful page showing off your 3 favorite reads.

1,277

readers submitted
so far, will you?

Ad

📚 If you like Less Than Zero, you might also like...

Book cover of Family Recipes: A Novel about Italian Culture, Catholic Guilt and the Culinary Crime of the Century

Family Recipes by Mike Consol,

Family Recipes is the story of Vinny Marciano, owner of the most fabulously successful Italian restaurant in all of Upstate New York. All is pretty much hunky dory at Marciano’s Mangia House until the safe in the restaurant's business office is breached and the Marciano family’s secret heirloom recipes are…

Book cover of The Gates of Polished Horn

The Gates of Polished Horn by Mark A. Rayner,

What happens when you’re face-to-face with a truth that shakes you? Do you accept it, or pretend it was never there?

Award-winning author Mark A. Rayner smudges the lines between realist and fabulist, literary and speculative in this collection of stories that examines this question—what Homer called passing through The…

5 book lists we think you will like!