When an investigation into boredom is done well, as it is in A Philosophy of Boredom ... it is positively gripping. Times Literary Supplement ... amusing, learned, and articulate ... You would be hard pressed to find a better book to make do with this year than this wonderful little one which is, somehow, despite the desolation at its core, oddly uplifting Glasgow Herald ... a fascinatingly modern essay on ennui and emptiness ... Svendsen's thesis is so cool that boredom, linked with desire rather than need, suddenly seems like a desirable state of being in an agitated age The Times ... a good, solid practical work of philosophy, in the tradition of Aristotle's Ethics and Burton's Anatomy of Melancholy ... a light touch and a playful attitude ... draws on a wide range of texts, from Martin Heidegger and Samuel Beckett to Iggy Pop and the Pet Shop Boys ... delightful and important' - New Statesman '... excellent ... anything but boring. Daily Telegraph For a serious work of philosophy, A philosophy of Boredom exhibits a light touch and impressive pop-cultural range. A typical page synergizes Kierkegaard ("the only thing I see is: emptiness") and Iggy Pop ("I'm bored/I'm bored/I'm the chairman of the bored"); not since Wayne's World confused him with Dick Van Patten has dour Soren been so deftly interposed with a modern cultural icon. This also inoculates the book from its most obvious pitfall. It's not boring Village Voice Far from boring, this is a highly accessible and entertaining study The Age A shocking, interesting, but also brilliantly entertaining analysis of one of our time's greatest problems. A Philosophy of Boredom offers an abundance of knowledge and an inspiring analysis Dagbladet An exciting and learned book about the absolute zero of existence Politiken