Schism 2] Press brings you Eugene Thacker's {anti} novel, An Ideal For Living. As today's strategies of conceptual writing have become legitimized and cliched, Thacker's text reminds us of how radical and potent these gestures once were, treading a fine line between the mechanical and the authorial. This is an important book.these pages take cues from Burroughs and Gibson, while at the same time presciently pointing to the web-based path writing would take over the next decade. It's a joy to see this back in print. - Kenneth Goldsmith, author of Day and Soliloquy, founder of Ubuweb Eugene Thacker's An Ideal for Living in the apoptosis of hyperreal language shed a data flesh as a discourse toward death continuously from cracks in DNA.It is present in an inexplicable state of literary language and data. - Kenji Siratori, author of Blood Electric and Mad In Japan".
An Ideal for Living