Who Is The Main Character In The Rules Of Attraction?

2026-02-22 15:56:10 186

4 Answers

Samuel
Samuel
2026-02-23 15:23:42
Reading 'The Rules of Attraction' feels like eavesdropping on the worst (but most entertaining) dorm gossip. Technically, Sean Bateman gets the most page time, but labeling him 'the main character' misses the point—it's an ensemble piece about people who barely know themselves. Lauren's my favorite; her inner monologue nails that early-'80s Ivy League disillusionment. Paul’s unrequited crush on Sean adds this tragicomic layer, especially since Sean barely notices him. Ellis wrote this in his early 20s, and you can tell; it's got that young writer's ambition, cramming in sex, drugs, and existential dread without filter. What sticks with me isn’t any one character but how their stories overlap and contradict, like a puzzle where the pieces don’t fit.
Owen
Owen
2026-02-23 17:49:05
Brett Easton Ellis's 'The Rules of Attraction' is this wild, chaotic ride through college life, and the main character isn't just one person—it's a trio of messed-up, fascinating students. Sean Bateman (yep, Patrick Bateman's younger brother from 'American Psycho') takes center stage a lot, with his drug-fueled apathy and messy relationships. Then there's Lauren, the girl who's way too smart for the scene she's stuck in, and Paul, the hopeless romantic who's painfully naive. The book shifts perspectives between them, so you get this fragmented, dizzying view of their lives. It's like watching a car crash in slow motion, but you can't look away because their voices are so raw and real.

What's interesting is how Ellis doesn't let you root for anyone outright. Sean's a trainwreck, Lauren's self-destructive in her own way, and Paul's just... sad. But that's the point—it's a satire of privilege and emptiness, and the 'main character' feels more like the collective toxicity of their world. I always finish it feeling drained but weirdly impressed by how Ellis captures that specific brand of nihilism.
Gavin
Gavin
2026-02-25 00:55:38
'The Rules of Attraction' doesn’t do straightforward protagonists. Sean’s the most visible—a charming disaster who sleeps with half the campus—but Lauren’s the heart of the book, even if she’d hate that description. Paul’s letters to his ex are painfully earnest, a contrast to Sean’s detachment. The rotating narrators make it feel like a collage of bad decisions, each voice adding another shade to the mess. It’s less about who’s 'main' and more about how they orbit each other, crashing together and apart.
Ryder
Ryder
2026-02-27 11:13:53
If you're asking about 'The Rules of Attraction,' forget finding a traditional hero—it's all about unreliable narrators. Sean Bateman's probably the closest thing to a protagonist, but he's such a slacker that calling him 'main' feels wrong. The novel's genius is how it jumps between characters, making you question who's really driving the story. Lauren's chapters hit harder for me, though; her quiet desperation contrasts so sharply with Sean's loud recklessness. Paul's sections are cringe-y but weirdly touching, like he's the only one who hasn't realized the game is rigged. The film adaptation (which Ellis apparently hates) leans harder into Sean's POV, but the book's rotating voices make it way juicier.
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