
5 novels with a psychopath or sociopath as narrator
What do a Wall Street banker, a butterfly collector, a teenage thug, a delusional dropout, and a self-styled poet of perversion have in common? Each is the narrator of their own story, and each warps that story to fit their desires. The books featured here dive into the minds of men who distort reality, sometimes to justify violence, sometimes to escape the void within. From Bret Easton Ellis's American Psycho to Nabokov's infamous Lolita, these novels are unsettling not just because of what happens, but because of how it's told. Through unreliable narrators, we are invited into worlds of moral decay, manipulation, obsession, and horror. These are philosophical provocations that ask how far can narrative seduce us before we see the truth.
Merger and acquisitions or murder and executions? It does not matter what one hears as both are the business of one Patrick Bateman, investment banker by day and murderer by night. Bateman, the narrator, is young and affluent. He goes to nightclubs, snorts narcotics, is particular about his appearance and keeps track of the fashions of the day. However, as Bateman's veneer of control begins to crack, the distinction between real and imagined blurs. He details his morning skincare routine with the same precision as his torture sessions, raising questions about what is real and what is imaginary. Is he a serial killer or just fantasising to fill the spiritual void? Bret Easton Ellis's American Psycho is satirical plunge into the hollow soul of 1980s Wall Street culture. It is a picture of a man consumed, literally and metaphorically, by consumerism. First published in 1991, American Psycho, shocked readers with its graphic violence and was banned or censored in multiple countries. However, it also sparked intense academic debate.
Most people have passions that keep them going, for some it is gathering collectables. It might be stamps, pebbles, rare books or plants. John Fowles' in his debut novel, The Collector, twists the concept and takes it to its extreme. First published in 1963, The Collector is the story of Frederick Clegg, a socially awkward butterfly collector who adds something new to his collection – a veritable social butterfly, a living, breathing woman. After winning the lottery, Frederick uses his newfound wealth to kidnap Miranda, an art student he has admired from afar, and lock her in the cellar of his secluded countryside home. He hopes that eventually his captive will fall in love with him. The book is divided into two parts, the first narrated through Clegg's eerily calm perspective and the second through Miranda's desperate diary entries. Narrated from the cellar, one can feel claustrophobia closing in. Zooming out, it is allegory of a world with constant struggles between power, class and control. Critics have called it everything from a twisted love story to a modern Gothic masterpiece. Horrifyingly, some serial killers have listed the book as an influence.
In A Clockwork Orange, Anthony Burgess, presents a dystopian future where teenage gangs roam the streets. It is told entirely from the point of view of 15-year-old Alex, who leads a gang of 'droogs' through a nightmare of 'ultra-violence.' One cannot help but observe that he is smart, sadistic, and obsessed with Beethoven. Strangely, he is both self-aware and of a philosophical bend of mind. He speaks in Nadsat, a teenage slang mashup of English and Russian. Through this strange language and his charisma, Alex invites us into his nightly adventures of 'ultra-violence,' classical music, and drug-laced milk. This continues until he's betrayed, arrested, and subjected to a government experiment that forces him to become 'good.' First published in 1962, it raises the question that if a person's ability to choose evil is taken away, can they still be considered human? The novel's original UK version includes a controversial final chapter where Alex begins to seek redemption, and even imagine a future family. But for decades, American readers got a bleaker version, ending just as Alex reverts to his violent ways. Even Stanley Kubrick's 1971 film adaptation left that final chapter out.
Set in the gritty chaos of early '90s New York, The Stalker introduces us to Robert Doughten Savile, known as 'Doughty' to those unfortunate enough to know him. Doughty's a privileged dropout from Darien, Connecticut, coasting on ego and delusions of grandeur while sinking ever deeper into the city's underbelly. He cons his way into the lives and homes of women who mistake his empty confidence for charm. He gaslights, manipulates, and lies with ease. While pretending to be a high-flying real estate mogul, Doughty is actually spending his days smoking in Tompkins Square Park and hustling in train station bathrooms. What he lacks in self-awareness or skill, he makes up for in calculated predation. Bomer through her dark humour peels back the layers of privilege, misogyny, and narcissism. If you're a fan of unreliable narrators, The Stalker is a must-read.
In Lolita, Nabokov hands the pen to a predator. Like any storyteller worth his salt, Humbert Humbert is free to drive the narrative as he wishes. He paints himself as a tragic romantic, a man cursed by an 'overwhelming love' for nymphets. He is never a predator, always a poet. He quotes Poe, rhapsodises about beauty, and drops literary allusions, luring us into his warped perspective, until it is too late and the reader complicit in his crime. He calls Dolores 'Lolita,' cloaking her in a fantasy and silence. He blames her for his obsession. Even his name, a pretentious doubling, hints towards his tendency to self-mythologise. He is an unreliable narrator, spinning child abuse as a grand passion while casually admitting to drugging Dolores, gaslighting her, and isolating her from the world. Here's the genius, one catches oneself listening and pitying him. Nabokov forces us to confront how monstrosity wears a charming mask. It also forces one to consider how art aestheticises evil.
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Time of India
2 days ago
- Time of India
Sabrina Carpenter sparks fresh backlash for 'pretending to be a child' amid Lolita controversy: Fans say she's trying too hard
Sabrina Carpenter might be celebrating chart success, but her latest Instagram post has fans doing a serious double-take. The singer, who just hit No. 1 in both the US and UK with her single Manchild, posted a carousel of behind-the-scenes photos on Wednesday to mark the milestone. Still, one picture in particular is causing fresh waves of internet discourse. This comes right after her Lolita controversy, which has already sparked a wave of criticism against the rising pop star. Sabrina shares a new controversial image In the newly shared image, Sabrina is perched inside a shopping cart wearing a checkered crop top, short denim shorts, and fire-red heels, while an older man—suited in a leather jacket—leans beside her on a motorcycle. The whole scene reads like a quirky Americana fever dream, but given the timing, some aren't seeing it as innocent fun. With the Lolita-themed backlash still trailing her recent photoshoots and album art, fans online were quick to comment on the odd visual. The image was also shared on Reddit's r/popculturecirclejerk subreddit with the title 'Controversy queen strikes again' and the caption 'Amidst the Lolita controversy, Carpenter pretends to be a child shopping with her dad.' In the comments, Redditors largely agreed that the Please Please Please hitmaker might be trying a little too hard to spark a second wave of viral attention after last summer's breakout success. Some users felt that the photo leaned into controversy just for the sake of staying in the spotlight, calling it a bit forced compared to her earlier, more effortless pop stunts. One user wrote, "There comes a time in every starlet's career when you pull out the degraded film filters, rednecks, and cigarettes." Another mocked the 26-year-old, writing, "Someone who is a peak nepo baby from an old showbiz family, who was a child star under 10, because her Auntie is literally Bart Simpson (who was also a young star) – doing poor-core is wildly cringe." A third commented, "I preferred Into You by Ariana Grande music vid for my dirty motel pr*stitute and dirty biker drug dealer Americana vibe," while a fourth wrote, "women are not for sale." Sabrina denies any Lolita inspiration but the internet isn't convinced This all comes on the heels of controversy around a W Magazine shoot that featured Sabrina in a soaked yellow dress, an image nearly identical to scenes from the 1997 film Lolita. Fans were quick to make the connection online, but Sabrina decided to publicly hit back. 'I've never seen this movie,' she wrote in a public comment on TikTok. 'It's never been on my mood board and never would be.' Despite her clear denial, the conversation didn't die down. Instead, it spread into a wider debate about her current album visuals, which some have accused of pandering to the male gaze and leaning too hard into infantilised sexuality. Sabrina Carpenter shuts down claims that she was inspired by 'Lolita' for her W Magazine photoshoot:'i've never seen this movie. it's never been on my mood board and never would be' She's self-aware and unbothered, for the most part Sabrina isn't new to controversy, and she's shown she knows how to play with public perception. In recent interviews, she admitted she's aware of how her sexualised image is received and finds humour in the irony that people often criticise the same songs and visuals they helped make popular. When one user accused her of having no personality beyond sex, she clapped back, 'Girl, yes, and it is goooooood.' Meanwhile, she was recently slammed for controversial imagery for her upcoming album, Man's Best Friend, for allegedly pandering to the 'male gaze'. Her new album drops on August 29, 2025.


Indian Express
3 days ago
- Indian Express
5 novels with a psychopath or sociopath as narrator
What do a Wall Street banker, a butterfly collector, a teenage thug, a delusional dropout, and a self-styled poet of perversion have in common? Each is the narrator of their own story, and each warps that story to fit their desires. The books featured here dive into the minds of men who distort reality, sometimes to justify violence, sometimes to escape the void within. From Bret Easton Ellis's American Psycho to Nabokov's infamous Lolita, these novels are unsettling not just because of what happens, but because of how it's told. Through unreliable narrators, we are invited into worlds of moral decay, manipulation, obsession, and horror. These are philosophical provocations that ask how far can narrative seduce us before we see the truth. Merger and acquisitions or murder and executions? It does not matter what one hears as both are the business of one Patrick Bateman, investment banker by day and murderer by night. Bateman, the narrator, is young and affluent. He goes to nightclubs, snorts narcotics, is particular about his appearance and keeps track of the fashions of the day. However, as Bateman's veneer of control begins to crack, the distinction between real and imagined blurs. He details his morning skincare routine with the same precision as his torture sessions, raising questions about what is real and what is imaginary. Is he a serial killer or just fantasising to fill the spiritual void? Bret Easton Ellis's American Psycho is satirical plunge into the hollow soul of 1980s Wall Street culture. It is a picture of a man consumed, literally and metaphorically, by consumerism. First published in 1991, American Psycho, shocked readers with its graphic violence and was banned or censored in multiple countries. However, it also sparked intense academic debate. Most people have passions that keep them going, for some it is gathering collectables. It might be stamps, pebbles, rare books or plants. John Fowles' in his debut novel, The Collector, twists the concept and takes it to its extreme. First published in 1963, The Collector is the story of Frederick Clegg, a socially awkward butterfly collector who adds something new to his collection – a veritable social butterfly, a living, breathing woman. After winning the lottery, Frederick uses his newfound wealth to kidnap Miranda, an art student he has admired from afar, and lock her in the cellar of his secluded countryside home. He hopes that eventually his captive will fall in love with him. The book is divided into two parts, the first narrated through Clegg's eerily calm perspective and the second through Miranda's desperate diary entries. Narrated from the cellar, one can feel claustrophobia closing in. Zooming out, it is allegory of a world with constant struggles between power, class and control. Critics have called it everything from a twisted love story to a modern Gothic masterpiece. Horrifyingly, some serial killers have listed the book as an influence. In A Clockwork Orange, Anthony Burgess, presents a dystopian future where teenage gangs roam the streets. It is told entirely from the point of view of 15-year-old Alex, who leads a gang of 'droogs' through a nightmare of 'ultra-violence.' One cannot help but observe that he is smart, sadistic, and obsessed with Beethoven. Strangely, he is both self-aware and of a philosophical bend of mind. He speaks in Nadsat, a teenage slang mashup of English and Russian. Through this strange language and his charisma, Alex invites us into his nightly adventures of 'ultra-violence,' classical music, and drug-laced milk. This continues until he's betrayed, arrested, and subjected to a government experiment that forces him to become 'good.' First published in 1962, it raises the question that if a person's ability to choose evil is taken away, can they still be considered human? The novel's original UK version includes a controversial final chapter where Alex begins to seek redemption, and even imagine a future family. But for decades, American readers got a bleaker version, ending just as Alex reverts to his violent ways. Even Stanley Kubrick's 1971 film adaptation left that final chapter out. Set in the gritty chaos of early '90s New York, The Stalker introduces us to Robert Doughten Savile, known as 'Doughty' to those unfortunate enough to know him. Doughty's a privileged dropout from Darien, Connecticut, coasting on ego and delusions of grandeur while sinking ever deeper into the city's underbelly. He cons his way into the lives and homes of women who mistake his empty confidence for charm. He gaslights, manipulates, and lies with ease. While pretending to be a high-flying real estate mogul, Doughty is actually spending his days smoking in Tompkins Square Park and hustling in train station bathrooms. What he lacks in self-awareness or skill, he makes up for in calculated predation. Bomer through her dark humour peels back the layers of privilege, misogyny, and narcissism. If you're a fan of unreliable narrators, The Stalker is a must-read. In Lolita, Nabokov hands the pen to a predator. Like any storyteller worth his salt, Humbert Humbert is free to drive the narrative as he wishes. He paints himself as a tragic romantic, a man cursed by an 'overwhelming love' for nymphets. He is never a predator, always a poet. He quotes Poe, rhapsodises about beauty, and drops literary allusions, luring us into his warped perspective, until it is too late and the reader complicit in his crime. He calls Dolores 'Lolita,' cloaking her in a fantasy and silence. He blames her for his obsession. Even his name, a pretentious doubling, hints towards his tendency to self-mythologise. He is an unreliable narrator, spinning child abuse as a grand passion while casually admitting to drugging Dolores, gaslighting her, and isolating her from the world. Here's the genius, one catches oneself listening and pitying him. Nabokov forces us to confront how monstrosity wears a charming mask. It also forces one to consider how art aestheticises evil.


Time of India
3 days ago
- Time of India
Is Sabrina Carpenter's latest photoshoot inspired by the movie Lolita? Singer responds amid backlash against album cover
Being labelled a pop superstar comes with the territory, but for Sabrina Carpenter, fame hasn't just brought chart-topping hits and red carpets; it's also dragged her into the middle of heated controversies, especially when it comes to how she presents herself. Accusations that she's "overly sexualising" her image to appeal to a specific kind of audience have followed her for quite some time now, and now, they've sparked fresh backlash. The latest controversy stemmed from a TikTok-fuelled claim that her new W Magazine photoshoot references the 1997 film adaptation of Lolita, a story notoriously centred on the sexualisation of a young girl. Sabrina has refuted the claims, but the internet's mixed reactions Sabrina Carpenter denies claims that the photoshoot was inspired by Lolita As the comparisons started making rounds, most notably a viral post aligning Sabrina's pose in a grassy field with that of the original Lolita movie poster, the internet was quick to take notes. In the photo, Carpenter wears a simple pale yellow dress, lying on her stomach in the grass with her feet up, eerily similar to the original Lolita promotional image featuring actress Dominique Swain. That resemblance was all some people needed to start drawing conclusions. But Sabrina was quick to shut it down. In a direct response to one of the viral TikToks, she commented, "I've never seen this movie. It's never been on my mood board and never would be.' Sabrina Carpenter shuts down claims that she referenced 'Lolita' in a W Magazine photoshoot:'I've never seen this movie. It's never been on my mood board and never would be.' The internet is divided Despite her clarification, some corners of the internet are refusing to let it go. Many argue that even if it wasn't intentional, the resemblance is too close to ignore. One user shared a collage of Sabrina's pictures and stills from the movie, accusing the pop star of copying Lolita for a long time now. "Can Sabrina literally stop referencing the Lolita movie? "It's not even a coincidence anymore," the user wrote. Can Sabrina literally stop referencing the Lolita movie? It's not even a coincidence anymore… Another alleged, "It might not be her doing; it could be the person who took the shot who got inspo from Lolita; either way, all publicity is good publicity." Might not be her doing it could be the person who took the shot got inspo from lolita, either way all publicity is good publicity Meanwhile, several users also came to her defence, with one arguing, "We're getting to a point where original ideas are getting harder to come by when every thought is broadcast constantly on the internet." There are going to be similarities to other things just by coincidence. Keep that in mind." We're getting to a point where original ideas are getting harder to come by when every thought is broadcasted constantly on the internet. There are going to be similarities to other things just by coincidence. Keep that in mind. One person mentioned, "A girl takes a picture lying in the grass, and people immediately jump to the worst conclusions possible." a girl takes a picture laying in the grass and people immediately jump to the worst conclusions possible "Not these weirdos imposing their fantasies on her just because she happens to be short," said another user. Not these weirdos imposing their fantasies on her just bcoz she happen to be it cutiee ⏰ "Let's stop assigning meaning where there isn't any. "She's allowed to just exist in her vibe, lol," one added. let's stop assigning meaning where there isn't any. she's allowed to just exist in her vibe lol Backlash against Sabrina's Man's Best Friend album cover Sabrina Carpenter recently found herself at the centre of another heated debate over the cover of her upcoming album Man's Best Friend. The image, which shows her on all fours with a man gripping her hair, sparked backlash online, with some accusing her of feeding into the male gaze and calling the visual 'regressive' and 'soft-porn'. But Sabrina, never one to shy away from criticism, clapped back at the noise with her signature confidence. When a commenter asked if she had a personality beyond sex, she simply replied, 'Girl, yes, and it is goooooood.' Despite the controversy, the numbers speak for themselves, with her latest single, Manchild, debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100, proving that fans are here for her bold choices, both musically and visually. To stay updated on the stories that are going viral, follow Indiatimes Trending.