Introduction
In this chapter, the narrator is busy send a letter to the company clients which reveal that there is a fault with their car. But during the process his boss comes and gets a paper in the printer which has the fight club rules. As we can see the narrator is doing something against the company. He is also making copies of the fight club rules where the boss gets hold of the original copy which the narrator forgets to pick from the printer machine. From this the narrator shows a number of characters such as disobedience, he breaks the company rules against the use of company equipment for the personal gains (Guignon 35). He also tells the company client the status of their cars which shows his humane part.
When he is confronted by the boss pertaining the nature of the paper the boss just found in the printer the narrator courageously explains to him a long story this by indirectly ends up scaring the boss. He does not respond to what these copies are for when he is asked by the boss instead he does a great job describing the nature of the person who gave the job. The narrator has this sense of description where he clearly describes Tyler Durben. After all, this the narrator clearly denies that the papers are not his as he snatches them from the boss (Guignon 35). Though the situation clearly shows that the papers belong to him but he does justify this by saying how the company sells cars with defects to its clients which lead to a number of casualties. He also gives the boss paper cut but does not even apologies. This part describes the narrator as a rude person and we can clearly see this.
Work cited
Guignon, Charles. "C HUCK PALAHNIUK IS AN EXTREMELY intuitive writer." Fight Club (2013): 35.