I had no idea who this guy is when I started reading this book.
It said writings on Mysticism, Consciousness, and Existentialism on the cover, so I was really curious to see what's up with that. Did he make some kind of synthesis of these areas or what?
At first, I was very disappointed. It starts like the pompous rambling about his achievements and whatnot, but as I kept going and it grew on me.
One of the great things about this book is that it's like a museum of obscure ideas from philosophy, psychology, parapsychology, fringe science... He writes about Russian mystics like Gurdjieff, about completely forgotten or not known in the first place continental philosophers, he mentions scientific theories from the 60s and 70s that have been debunked for a long time, but in spite of that, it's still written in simple and down-to-earth language.
His main idea is that there must be more to life and human beings than what pessimistic philosophers(Sartre, Schopenhauer, Heidegger)assumed and that these things if taken into consideration can produce an optimistic version of existentialism.
In the search for these overlooked elements, he will go from batshit crazy parapsychological theories about the afterlife, telepathy, ghosts to more conventional stuff like Maslow's peak experiences.
One of the problems with this book is that it's just a bunch of essays that were put together, and many ideas and stories will be mentioned too many times. Like, Prust and the story about the cookie that triggered a flood of memories that caused him to write his magnum opus is mentioned around six times in the same manner during the course of the book.
Other than that, this is a great read that broadened my perspective and my reading list.