Magic Monday

The image? I field a lot of questions about my books these days, so I've decided to do little capsule summaries of them here, one per week. The book above on the left was my thirtieth published book and, in sales terms, one of my least successful works yet. I was invited by a small psychology press, Karnac Books, to write a book about the psychological implications of peak oil. It was an interesting project and one that I accepted with enthusiasm; it got a nice clean editing job and a good cover, and saw print. The result was one of my better books, a tolerably crisp analysis of the cascading mental health consequences of the mismatch between the modern mythology of progress and the reality of decline. Those few psychologists who noticed its existence at all, however, responded with horror or flat dismissal. Its sales have been so modest that, while it remains in print (with a firm that bought out most of Karnac's titles), the distributor that supplies stock to my Bookshop store doesn't carry it. You can get it from your favorite online bookstore.
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***This Magic Monday is now closed. See you next week!***
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(Anonymous) 2024-06-11 01:36 am (UTC)(link)I will say his work is helpful in some ways because it normalizes altered states of consciousness and trials and tribulations of the spiritual path which he borrows the term "The Dark Night of the Soul" for. It's helped me understand certain things. Ingram is a medical doctor and practices chaos magic, though he remains ontologically agnostic towards it from what I can tell.
To OP (and JMG if so inclined), I lump in the whole pragmatic dharma movement with what I call "The Cult of 0" which is my term for the vein of society under the spell of reason and meaningless. I'll be honest, it's pretty much the same thing as the Radiance in The Weird of Hali. Just ask yourself if in 20 years you'd rather be like the well known occultists of today or like the well known pragmatic dharma practitioners. Pragmatic dharma is incredibly insular and vapid if you pay attention to it long enough.
Luke Z