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Buy A Short Stay in Hell by Peck, Steven L. from desertcart's Fiction Books Store. Everyday low prices on a huge range of new releases and classic fiction. Review: Amazing - This slim novel packs an existential punch. While it’s deeply philosophical, it still has a surprising amount of heart. I felt emotionally engaged from the start, even though the narrative often leans into abstract ideas rather than character driven drama. The depiction of Hell is what really stayed with me. How something so expansive could feel so suffocating. Peck’s take on the library was completely new to me (I hadn’t encountered Borges before), it felt original and disturbing. Soren, our narrator, isn’t someone to root for in the traditional sense but he works perfectly as a vessel for exploring the book’s weighty ideas. The pacing was spot on. It’s short but doesn’t feel lacking, and while I could have read more, everything was so well crafted that it didn’t need extra pages. The atmosphere is relentlessly oppressive and claustrophobic. Certainly not hopeful but powerful in its bleakness. I completely agree with others who say it’s quietly terrifying. The scale of it all, the impossibility of ever finding meaning or escape, really got under my skin. I’ve only just finished it so it’s hard to say which parts will linger most, but I suspect it’ll stay with me for a long time and the more I think about it the more I realise I can’t fault it, so I’m giving it the full five stars. Review: Good way to spend a few hours - First time reading this type of genre. Ut wasnt what i was expecting, but I found it interesting. I wish the ending was more final but, that's the point I guess.
| Best Sellers Rank | 183 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) 5 in Metaphysical & Visionary Fiction (Books) 206 in Contemporary Fiction (Books) |
| Customer reviews | 4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars (11,432) |
| Dimensions | 15.24 x 0.69 x 22.86 cm |
| Edition | Firsttion ed. |
| ISBN-10 | 098374842X |
| ISBN-13 | 978-0983748427 |
| Item weight | 172 g |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 108 pages |
| Publication date | 20 Mar. 2012 |
| Publisher | Strange Violin Editions |
S**Y
Amazing
This slim novel packs an existential punch. While it’s deeply philosophical, it still has a surprising amount of heart. I felt emotionally engaged from the start, even though the narrative often leans into abstract ideas rather than character driven drama. The depiction of Hell is what really stayed with me. How something so expansive could feel so suffocating. Peck’s take on the library was completely new to me (I hadn’t encountered Borges before), it felt original and disturbing. Soren, our narrator, isn’t someone to root for in the traditional sense but he works perfectly as a vessel for exploring the book’s weighty ideas. The pacing was spot on. It’s short but doesn’t feel lacking, and while I could have read more, everything was so well crafted that it didn’t need extra pages. The atmosphere is relentlessly oppressive and claustrophobic. Certainly not hopeful but powerful in its bleakness. I completely agree with others who say it’s quietly terrifying. The scale of it all, the impossibility of ever finding meaning or escape, really got under my skin. I’ve only just finished it so it’s hard to say which parts will linger most, but I suspect it’ll stay with me for a long time and the more I think about it the more I realise I can’t fault it, so I’m giving it the full five stars.
J**N
Good way to spend a few hours
First time reading this type of genre. Ut wasnt what i was expecting, but I found it interesting. I wish the ending was more final but, that's the point I guess.
M**Y
This is possibly the book that everyone should read.
The philosophical and theological debate engineered by this story far outweigh the knowledge of physics and of quantum existence and time itself. It gives an idea of what it is to exist forever yet not exist in any sense that we understand. It goes beyond the need for knowledge and disturbingly creates a view of humanity subsumed in grief and loss and finally madness and barbarity. It considers the vast ecological smorgasbord that we coexist with on our tiny crammed planet and the vastness of the universe and then how meaningless life can become without it. In the end as humans we always have hope but what do we become when there is no hope just the certainty that the only search left is the one for meaning and the knowledge that the answer can be found just not knowing when time itself loses its meaning. Just a wild view of what @booksnpunks calls a Borgesian nightmare of hell. Yet the question remains what is hell? What are we ourselves? A Cartesian entity or a god who doesn’t know they are a god?
L**I
Ok but expected more
This was an interesting idea but didn’t quite hit the way I expected. It follows a man who ends up in a version of hell simply for not following the “correct” religion, Zoroastrianism, and is then stuck in something like the Library of Babel, trying to find the one book that contains the story of his life. The concept is really strong and it feels a bit like a thought experiment more than a full story. There are other people there all doing the same thing, which adds to that strange, almost surreal atmosphere. A lot of people describe this as really bleak, and it is in theory, but the writing feels quite fast and detached. It almost comes across like he just accepts his fate rather than fully experiencing the horror of it. Also, for someone who needs to find a specific book about his life, he doesn’t actually spend that much time searching through books, which felt a bit odd. Overall, it’s an interesting, philosophical read, but I wanted a bit more depth and emotional impact and it just sort of ended without really beginning. I thought there might be a bit more life reflection from his pov or something.
A**.
You should read this!
An astonishingly good read, asking some pretty tricky questions about the afterlife and our road to redemption.
M**N
Hell of a read
Soren always believed that when he died he would be reunited with his loved ones who had passed before him. However, when the day eventually arrives he is cast into a hell by a God he does not know. Here is finds himself faced with the prospect of living forever in a vast library, his only escape is to find the story of his life in a library that contains every book that has ever been written and every book that could ever be written. A Short Stay in Hell is one of the best and most haunting descriptions of hell I have ever read. When Soren first arrives he does not quite realise the enormity of the task a head of him and embraces the challenge of finding his story. As he works his way through the Library he finds miles of shelving full of books of jibberish, only occasionally coming across a word or sentence that makes sense. It is only now he truly begins to comprehend how many books he needs to look through before he finds one that might tell the story of his life. As the years pass in hell Soren makes friends and enemies and falls in and out of love while slowly losing all meaning and context to his existence. He loses any sense of place as everywhere becomes a uniform monotony, slowly sending him to the brink of madness. This was one of the best short stories I have read in a long time and haven't been able to stop thinking about it since. This is no firey hell with the screams of the damned. This is a hell where an individual loses all meaning to their existence, to die in this hell is to wake up again the next day faced with the same impossible and empty task, it truly is a descent into madness and I loved it.
L**A
6 star book
6 star book! I have read 84 books this year so far and never give any book 5 stars but this I have given a book 6 stars.. this is the book every person should read.. 102 pages of absolutely mind bending writing! It will have you questioning your very existence and leave you thinking about it for days/weeks 👍🏼 get it read !
L**1
good but imperfect
A lot goofier at first than i was led to believe. But it does get under your skin towards the end. Something like aniara is better though
F**D
I was very excited to read this book but found it lacking. Felt very pretentious and frustrating. Pointless with no clarity or closure, probably the point of the book as it's about being in hell.
I**S
Amazing book!huge recommend,pulls togehter science/religion and fantasy in one great read! Came deliverd in good condition everything awesome^^
A**R
Very interesting take on purgatory
S**S
Fascinating read. I’m not a big book reader but I couldn’t put it down. I felt it could’ve been more developed but otherwise a very memorable read
K**E
I really loved this short story. It had me thinking about it long after I finished it.
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