Quote from: Andrew McIntosh on May 17, 2016, 06:54:04 AM
Quote from: oOoOoOo on May 17, 2016, 02:04:23 AM
Pessoa, Fernando - The Book of Disquiet (Penguin Classics)
I tried that. Seemed okay at first read but on the second go I just got bored with it. Just too twee for my tastes.
"Picture of Dorian Gray" is a good book, I think. Wilde's style is completely readable, although sometimes at odds with the rather darker themes he has in this book. I'm a big fan of Wilde's fiction and plays, find his poems a bit dull at times.
If you're looking for things to read, I'd recommend the basics - Schopenhauer's "Studies in Pessimism", Ligotti's "The Conspiracy Against the Human Race", Benatar's "Better Never to Have Been", Perry's "Every Cradle is a Grave" and Cioran's "A Brief History of Decay" and "The Trouble With Being Born". For fiction, read Houellebecq's "Atomised" and "Platform", McCarthy's "Blood Meridian" and anything by Lovecraft and, again, Ligotti especially "My Work is Not Yet Done"). There are others, of course, but here is a full enough outline of what life really is and what we humans really are. And once you've learned, you can't forget or ignore.
Forget the search for any bliss. Reject any notion of value in life. Take off the blinkers, stop listening to the yay-sayers, surrender to the dark side - it is your destiny.
Hello. Thank you for your reply to my deleted comment. I had to delete it, because I woke up the next morning feeling embarrassed at how stupid I sounded. I may not have sounded stupid, but I felt terrible, as I often do when I say things.
Thank you for your suggestions. I have been wanting to get The Conspiracy Against The Human Race, but that book is rather expensive. Those other ones sound like solid suggestions, I've actually picked up a book by Cioran from the library called On The Height Of Despair. I dismissed it because it closely resembled my own journal entries. I have the complete Cthulhu mythos and early works of HP Lovecraft on paperback. Blood Meridian, hmm. I'll have to look into that one more and see if I'm sold on the idea of reading it, I don't usually like gangster themed stuff.
As for your comment about search for bliss. I think that it's good enough to simply not feel grim in the wake of every day life. Knowing that I am simply the self awareness and consciousness of a brain, somewhat relieves me and somewhat depresses me. Except, I know in my most lucid moments that there's really nothing to worry about, in this case. I can't change the things outside of my control, but there's also no real purpose to seek a sort of transcendental feeling or knowledge, because what is that? Just a rewiring of the parts of your brain responsible for feeling happy. I'm happy enough knowing when I die I won't feel anything and that I can observe reality, but not have it become an integral part of how I feel.
I recently bought a few books and I have a few more books that I want to get.
Franz Kafka - The Trial
Jorge Luis Borges - Collected Fictions
Oscar Wilde - The Picture of Dorian Gray (Dover Thrift Editions)
Jean Genet - Funeral Rites
Clarice Lispector - The Passion According to G.H. (Emergent Literatures)
Fernando Pessoa - The Book of Disquiet (Penguin Classics)
George Orwell - Animal Farm
Already, I can sort of tell which ones I'm going to read cover to cover and which ones I won't. I'll probably make it through Kafka, because I already read Metamorphosis with little struggle. I will probably make it through Animal Farm, even though I found 1984 boring and am still struggling to make it through that book. I will probably have a difficult time reading basically any of these other books, except I don't know about Oscar Wilde, I just bought that because Morrissey likes it.