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240 pages, Hardcover
First published September 1, 2011
The pessimist’s credo, or one of them, is that nonexistence never hurt anyone and existence hurts everyone.
Consciousness makes it seem as if (1) there is something to do; (2) there is somewhere to go; (3) there is something to be; (4) there is someone to know. This is what makes consciousness the parent of all horrors, the thing that makes us try to do something, go somewhere, be something, and know someone, such as ourselves, so that we can escape our MALIGNANTLY USELESS being and think that being alive is all right rather than that which should not be.(yes, MALIGNANTLY USELESS is always capitalized)
Beef, pork, sometimes goat—they go into us and come out of us. This is part of the regimen of nonsense that nature forced upon us. But it is not all the nonsense we must endure as we go to and fro on the earth and walk up and down upon it. The nature nonsense, the God nonsense. How much nonsense can we take in our lives? And is there any way we can escape it? No, there is not. We are doomed to all kinds of nonsense: the pain nonsense, the nightmare nonsense, the sweat and slave nonsense, and many other shapes and sizes of insufferable nonsense. It is brought to us on a plate, and we must eat it up or face the death nonsense.
We are aberrations—beings born undead, neither one thing nor another, or two things at once … uncanny things that have nothing to do with the rest of creation, horrors that poison the world by sowing our madness everywhere we go, glutting daylight and darkness with incorporeal obscenities.
by no means a philosophical work, let alone a magnum opus. It’s a synthesis of ideas I’ve formed over my life and of other people’s ideas that rhyme with mine.In some ways I found the book easier to read than his fiction, as the style is somewhat conversational, which offsets the bleakness. That said, I read it over the course of several months and only read small sections at a time. I do think it would have greatly benefited from additional editing and proofreading, at least in this first edition from Hippocampus Press. One would expect a long-time editor like Ligotti to have gone through the proofs with an eagle eye, but perhaps he wasn't given the chance or was simply too anhedonic to care...