
Bret Easton Ellis signed first editions have become highly collectible thanks to the author’s enduring cultural impact and the continued relevance of novels like American Psycho and Less Than Zero. As a leading voice of late-twentieth-century fiction, Ellis has seen his work adapted across film, theatre and popular culture, increasing demand for early printings bearing his signature. With several titles recognised by major literary prize committees, collectors value the scarcity and long-term appeal of authentic first editions. Our curated selection highlights some of the most desirable copies available, ideal for anyone building or expanding a serious modern-fiction collection.
American Psycho ~ SIGNED by BRET EASTON ELLIS ~ First British Edition ~ 1st 1998
🇺🇸 Price: US $1,500.00
Buy It NowAmerican Psycho Bret Easton Ellis First Vintage Edition 31st Print 1991 PB
🇺🇸 Price: US $25.00
Buy It NowSIGNED LIMITED Ed. Bret Easton Ellis AMERICAN PSYCHO Easton Press Leather SEALED
🇺🇸 Price: US $2,295.00
Buy It NowAmerican Psycho • 1st Edition, First Printing • Bret Easton Ellis • 1991
🇺🇸 Price: US $145.00
Buy It NowAmerican Psycho by Bret Easton Ellis (1991 First Edition 31st Printing)
🇺🇸 Price: US $29.99
Buy It NowRare AMERICAN PSYCHO Signed 1st Edition 1991 GERMAN Bret Easton Ellis
🇺🇸 Price: US $350.00
Buy It NowAbout Bret Easton Ellis
Bret Easton Ellis emerged in the 1980s as one of the defining voices of a new, disaffected generation of American writers, gaining almost instant notoriety for his cool, minimalist style and his unflinching look at excess, detachment and moral drift. Born in Los Angeles in 1964, Ellis studied at Bennington College, where he began writing his incendiary debut Less Than Zero (1985). The novel’s blurred line between youth culture and nihilism marked him as a provocateur with a sharp instinct for cultural diagnosis. Its success propelled him into the front rank of young novelists associated with modern literary fiction, even as his themes resisted easy categorisation.
Ellis’s second novel, The Rules of Attraction (1987), deepened his exploration of emotional alienation on elite college campuses, written in a fractured, multi-voice structure that revealed both his formal daring and his fascination with unreliable narrators. But it was American Psycho (1991) that cemented his infamy. The story of Wall Street executive Patrick Bateman was met with outrage for its extreme violence, yet the book has since come to be seen as a razor-sharp satire of materialism and performative identity at the end of the twentieth century. Today it is frequently cited as one of the most culturally significant novels of its decade, adapted into a celebrated film and stage musical.
Subsequent works have shown Ellis’s interest in intertextuality and the porous boundaries between fact and fiction. Glamorama (1998) combined celebrity culture with conspiracy thriller tropes, while Lunar Park (2005) blended autobiography and horror in a metafictional narrative that imagined a fictionalised Bret Easton Ellis confronting the ghosts of his past. His later novel Imperial Bedrooms (2010) returned to the characters of Less Than Zero, presenting a dark reckoning with fame and the corrosive effects of time.
Ellis has also been active as a screenwriter, podcaster and cultural commentator. His nonfiction collection White (2019) offered reflections on art, politics and digital discourse, and while divisive, it reaffirmed his willingness to provoke debate. In 2023 he returned to fiction with The Shards, a tense, semi-autobiographical coming-of-age thriller praised for its narrative control and emotional depth.
Though often associated with controversy, Ellis’s body of work has drawn sustained critical interest and a devoted international readership. His novels have been shortlisted for and honoured by major literary awards, with The Shards receiving particular acclaim across prize longlists. Ellis continues to be regarded as a writer who captures the anxieties, fantasies and fractures of contemporary American culture, and his works remain highly sought after by collectors and readers alike.
Collector’s Note

This is my personal copy of The Informers, signed by Bret Easton Ellis during a meet-and-greet at the 14th Rome Film Fest in October 2019. Ellis had come to discuss cinema and present his then-new book, White, and as a long-time admirer who has read all his work, I brought this copy on the off chance there might be a signing session. I admit feeling a little nervous as I waited in the queue, but it turned into a wonderfully relaxed moment – Ellis was surprisingly friendly and approachable – and I left with a wonderful souvenir of an encounter with an author I deeply admire.
Illustration of Bret Easton Ellis based on a photograph by Mark Coggins from San Francisco, CC BY 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons. AI-generated illustration for editorial purposes; does not imply endorsement by the author.