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Dreaming to Some Purpose (2004)

par Colin Wilson

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Colin Wilson wrote The Outsider, a brilliant account of the pain of being alive today, when he was just twenty-four. Like Lord Byron. he woke up and found himself famous. The Outsider sold millions of copies around the world, and he was acclaimed as one of the leading intellectuals of the age. Because of his radically new attitudes he was - with John Osborne - dubbed an 'angry young man' in the article that originally coined that phrase. In this way a young man from a working class background suddenly found himself moving in the most colourful literary and artistic circles of the day. Angus Wilson, John Osborne, Kingsley Amis, Kenneth Tynan, Francis Bacon and Norman Mailer - all observed with a true outsider's eye for absurdity. But perhaps an even greater theme is his interest in trying to discover and develop ways of controlling his own consciousness, so that he could attain 'peak experiences' at will and also keep madness at bay. Many of his contemporaries accused Colin Wilson of betraying his youthful intellectual promise, by later writing bestsellers on subjects such as the paranormal and the mysteries of ancient Egypt, but in this return to the themes of The Outsider, looked at from the point of his own life story, he again proves himself one of the great intellectuals of our age, never ceasing to wrestle with the great questions of life and death, and writing with an erudition and an easy way with ideas that is rare in English literary life.… (plus d'informations)
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This is the autobiography an original mind who, without formal training, wrote mostly about ideas from an unconventional, intelligent and psychologically adventurous expereince of life. I think its in here he suggests: "the idea is not to escape reality but to create it". ( )
1 voter ChrisWildman | Aug 7, 2010 |
NA
  pszolovits | Feb 3, 2021 |
I can't really put my finger on the exact reason, but this book was a major disappointment. I am surprised I managed to finish it frankly and think it could have been shorter by at least 100 pages. ( )
  J.v.d.A. | Nov 25, 2007 |
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Colin Wilson wrote The Outsider, a brilliant account of the pain of being alive today, when he was just twenty-four. Like Lord Byron. he woke up and found himself famous. The Outsider sold millions of copies around the world, and he was acclaimed as one of the leading intellectuals of the age. Because of his radically new attitudes he was - with John Osborne - dubbed an 'angry young man' in the article that originally coined that phrase. In this way a young man from a working class background suddenly found himself moving in the most colourful literary and artistic circles of the day. Angus Wilson, John Osborne, Kingsley Amis, Kenneth Tynan, Francis Bacon and Norman Mailer - all observed with a true outsider's eye for absurdity. But perhaps an even greater theme is his interest in trying to discover and develop ways of controlling his own consciousness, so that he could attain 'peak experiences' at will and also keep madness at bay. Many of his contemporaries accused Colin Wilson of betraying his youthful intellectual promise, by later writing bestsellers on subjects such as the paranormal and the mysteries of ancient Egypt, but in this return to the themes of The Outsider, looked at from the point of his own life story, he again proves himself one of the great intellectuals of our age, never ceasing to wrestle with the great questions of life and death, and writing with an erudition and an easy way with ideas that is rare in English literary life.

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