A Short Stay in Hell by Steven L. Peck | A Fermented Book Review
Sometimes you read a book and then it stays with you for months on end. I like to compare this fermentation. You do not write the review immediately; you let the work “ferment” in your mind for a while. But as this book sat in my mind, I increasingly felt uncomfortable, but in the best possible of ways.
And is this not the mark of great literature?
For one, this book made me ask uncomfortable questions while it made me feel strange, odd, discomforted. But second, it stayed with me, it remained in my mind. Some books are fleeting, they remain for a matter of seconds, but this book has now remained a couple of months in my book and every time I think about it, it is like a rekindled fire, an underground fire that burns the roots and which is seeking the smallest of kindle to relight.
This will be a strange review, one that tries to stay with the book, but in the process of the review, allow me to go off on my tangents. But for the most part, this review will only praise this book, for it is one of the best novels (novellas) that I have read in a while, and I would put this book on the list of books everyone should at least once read. It was that good.
Let us move into the review (and please beware, THERE WILL BE SPOILERS. If you want to read the book for yourself, do not continue if you have not read the book. AGAIN, SPOILERS AHEAD.)
From the start, we are thrown into a world that goes beyond our own. Unless you were part of a small-ish religious group, you will be thrown into a strange world, the hell of another religious group. You might, as one of the characters, lose your mind because you were sure you were part of the true religion, and it is at this early stage that you begin to question your own religious or non-religious commitments. But then one is thrown into the main part of the story: the actual hell for the character. And while it is not made completely evident, we can imagine that what we are reading is one of the books the author found on his journey. This brings in a different element, but if you did not read it as such, it does not really affect it.
Either way, hell is understood as a near-infinite library based on the work of Jorge Luis Borges, the library of babel. To escape this hell, you need to find your book, your life story, in the almost endless rows of books. Sounds easy? Until you realise just how big almost infinity is.
And this is what the author wanted to portray: the absurdity of large numbers. We can easily imagine large numbers, and we can easily think about “infinity” but when the two converge something strange happens: incredibly large numbers become infinite. Or: from the perspective of a finite being in a “short” amount of time, incredibly large numbers become infinite.
The title of the book, A short stay in Hell illustrates this absurdity: a life of 100 years is almost negligible in terms of a 100 million years. If we had near infinite time, which is not infinite time, we would not recognise the difference. Things dear to use would lose their significance. It is a common thought experiment in philosophy classes. If you had all the time in the world, you would literally stagnate, because “tomorrow is another day”. So, you would continually put out things because being in time lost all of its significance.
Yet the character in the book tries to live, tries to find his book, and on the way the strangest of things happen. And this might be my only critique of the book: events at times feels strange and unjustified. There is too much focus on sexual aspects, which the author could have dealt with more nuance. But for the most part, the book was exceptionally well written and thought out.
I wonder though, if the novella was turned into a full book, maybe a 1000 pager, if the story would still have its bite. So many people love the book, including me, but I felt like I wanted more, I wanted to sit with this book for a month. But one might also make the argument that because of its brevity it is a work of exceptional fiction. Not everything needs 1000 pages. But still, it felt too quick…
Either way, I hope that you will pick up this book, for it is one of those few books that not only leave you changed, but continually changes you…
Happy reading.
All of the musings and writings are my own, albeit inspired by this book. The photographs are also my own, taken with my Nikon D300.
The Fermented Philosopher's Library
| 🕮 The Book of Malachi | 🕮 The Outsider | 🕮 A Clockwork Orange | 🕮 Perfume |
|---|---|---|---|
| by T.C. Farren | by Stephen King | by Anthony Burgess | by Patrick Suskind |
| 🕮 The Uninvited | 🕮 Life Is Elsewhere | 🕮 Philosophy as a Way of Life | 🕮 The Space Between the Space Between |
|---|---|---|---|
| by Geling Yan | by Milan Kundera | by Pierre Hadot | by John Hunt |
| 🕮 Ezumezu: A System of Logic for African Philosophy | 🕮 Adjustment Day | 🕮 Philosophical Praxis: Origin, Relations, and Legacy | 🕮 The Unbearable Lightness of Being |
|---|---|---|---|
| by Jonathan O. Chimakonam | by Chuck Palahniuk | by Gerd Achenbach | by Milan Kundera |
| 🕮 Farundell | 🕮 The Abstinence Teacher | 🕮 All the Names | 🕮 Tender Is the Flesh |
|---|---|---|---|
| by L. R. Fredericks | by Tom Perrotta | by José Saramago | by Agustina Bazterrica |
| 🕮 Life Ceremony | 🕮 Marcien Towa’s African Philosophy | 🕮 The Book of Form and Emptiness | 🕮 The Child of God |
|---|---|---|---|
| by Sayaka Murata | by Marcien Towa | by Ruth Ozeki | by Cormac McCarthy |
| 🕮 A Girl Is a Half-formed Thing | 🕮 Against Decolonisation: Taking African Agency Seriously | 🕮 The Island of Missing Trees | 🕮 Helpmeet |
|---|---|---|---|
| by Eimear McBride | by Olúfẹ́mi Táíwò | by Elif Shafak | by Naben Ruthnum |
| 🕮 The Country Will Bring Us No Peace | 🕮 Study for Obedience |
|---|---|
| by Matthieu Simard | by Sarah Bernstein |
I'm so glad that you liked the book. It was such an interesting concept and definitely thought provoking. I still think about it almost a year after reading it. Its like thinking about the size of the universes lol.
It would have been nice if the book was a little longer but I also worry that it would lose its impact if it went too far. It might become boring with too much filler material or too dense with philosophy or something like that. I found it to be very impactful and philosophical but also very accessible for any type of reader. I kind of like that it said what it needed to say and then ended, rather than feeling the need to hit a word count to be more mainstream. Just my thoughts.
Your reply is upvoted by @topcomment; a manual curation service that rewards meaningful and engaging comments.
More Info - Support us! - Reports - Discord Channel
Oh yes, I agree 100%. I yearned for more, for a 1000 pager, but that was just because I liked the feeling while reading. It was written really well. But a 1000 page book would have totally destroyed the work. It was perfect as it. The brevity played into what it tried to symbolise. You might also know, but it reminded me of the poem of Whitman, I think, who said the world is a grain of sand in the palm of his hand, or something like that.
Congratulations @fermentedphil! You have completed the following achievement on the Hive blockchain And have been rewarded with New badge(s)
Your next payout target is 39000 HP.
The unit is Hive Power equivalent because post and comment rewards can be split into HP and HBD
You can view your badges on your board and compare yourself to others in the Ranking
If you no longer want to receive notifications, reply to this comment with the word
STOPCheck out our last posts: