
He will be publishing free and paid editions of his Substack, covering short fiction and essays as well as his new novel Greener Pastures, which will be serialized in 52 weekly newsletters in the paid edition.

Palahniuk has had more than 20 books published, including the massive best-seller Fight Club, which was made into a smash-hit film. The Palahniuk deal is particularly interesting as it looks like the author was publishing the book with Hachette which has agreed to hand it back as long as he gives them another book. Literary stars Chuck Palahniuk, Fight Club author, and Salman Rushdie, author of Midnight’s Children, have signed up with newsletter platform Substack to publish serialized novels and other content. The news on Wednesday of the re-edit was met with outrage on social media, but Palahniuk said he was already used to his books being changed in some countries, and even banned in some parts of America.Newsletter platform plucks novel from Hachette And that they pixelate the dildo in Marla’s room. He added: “My guess is they also omit the flash of penis at the end. He consolidated his thoughts on Substack, calling the incarceration of Pitt’s character: “Amazing. Palahniuk initially responded to reports detailing the change by saying: “This is SUPER wonderful! Everyone gets a happy ending in China!”


He was discharged from the hospital in 2012.” The character played by Pitt was put on trial, according to the new edit, before being “sent to a lunatic asylum, receiving psychological treatment. The Chinese version distributed by streaming service Tencent Video instead ends with a caption telling viewers that police uncovered the plot in time and arrested all criminals. He then stands on top of a tower block and witnesses the plan overseen by his alter ego to destroy consumerism begin to take effect, as the skyscrapers around him explode. The conclusion of the 1999 film in its original cut sees Ed Norton’s narrator realise that the character played by Brad Pitt is in fact a projection of his own mind.
