Amazon Best Seller

#1 in Philosophy #1 in Humour #1 in World History #1 in Self-Help/Psychology

Amazon Best Seller

#1 in Philosophy #1 in Humour #1 in World History #1 in Self-Help/Psychology

The Importance of Being Miserable

A short history of human happiness, and why sometimes it’s good to feel bad.

Extract

Humans just want to be happy, yes? After all, that’s what life’s all about.

Well … no.

It turns out that, for a huge chunk of history, feeling good was the furthest thing from our minds. Expecting life to be fun and fulfilling (or, if all else fails, fine) is actually a very recent phenomenon. And there’s every reason to think that it’s making us sad.

A playful tour of Western ‘progress’, from ancient philosophers to modern-day pop stars via pills, priests, Proust and the plague, The Importance of Being Miserable explores how, why and when we all started to pursue happiness.

And why feeling bad may not actually be all that bad.

Sydney Morning Herald


‘The author wears his erudition lightly as he leads the reader through a litany of cautionary tales from Ancient Egypt and Greece to the present day. His core thesis buys a quarrel with America’s Founding Fathers: the pursuit of happiness is pointless, he argues because if you chase hard enough to trap your quarry, it will quickly elude your grasp and leave you joyless.

– Ken Haley
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