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Notes on Nothing: The Joy of Being Nobody

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From the author's

This is a book about Nothing. You could also say it’s a book about Everything. Most accurately perhaps, it’s a book about Nothing-as-Everything and Everything-as-Nothing. It takes as its spine an account of a specific experience that seemed to happen to me, during which there wasn’t very much “Me” around. There have been many names given to these kinds of “non-experiences”, depending on what tradition or viewpoint they are being seen from.

Here let’s call it a meeting with Nothing, that never actually happened.

112 pages, Paperback

Published October 15, 2024

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About the author

Anonymous

3,423 followers
Books can be attributed to "Anonymous" for several reasons:

* They are officially published under that name
* They are traditional stories not attributed to a specific author
* They are religious texts not generally attributed to a specific author

Books whose authorship is merely uncertain should be attributed to Unknown.

See also: Anonymous

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5 stars
19 (50%)
4 stars
12 (31%)
3 stars
4 (10%)
2 stars
2 (5%)
1 star
1 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 15 of 15 reviews
Profile Image for Tosh.
Author 14 books789 followers
November 22, 2024
A very thoughtful and well-designed book on one of my favorite subject matters - nothing. There is a lot of stuff happening in Nothing, both in this small book, as well as the Big Nothing.
Profile Image for Julian.
197 reviews14 followers
December 3, 2024
I could say that I liked this book, but there may not be any real separate ‘I’ to do the liking.
Profile Image for Cory Hinkle.
9 reviews2 followers
October 6, 2024
This is a lovely little book that grows in meaning as you read. It’s hard to describe a book about nothing and nothingness but there is something meditative and deep about this read, the kind of book you want to read again to gain deeper meaning, a book you want to reach for now and again to read a few pages to remember that our egos are often the things that get in the way of so much possibility in our lives and in the world.
27 reviews
February 22, 2026
more so just logging this lil guy for my memory and records.

Anyway -- I liked it! A nice little meditation basically. Feels like an introduction to buddhism 101, but in a way that made it feel universal. Like arriving at spirituality on your own, instead of through a formal practice or structured religion. Even when it felt a little cheesy, I realized that there is something so genuinely beautiful about discovering your own sense of spiritualty, and then moreso when that sense aligns with a greater organized practice -- just seems so affirming, so comfortable knowing that there truly might be a perennial philosophy.

Loved the imagery employed throughout; really helped visualize and ground the feelings.
Profile Image for Sarrah.
9 reviews3 followers
November 15, 2024
I picked this one up at a book fair solely because of the endorsement from Zadie Smith on the cover. It seems this book works to elucidate a sort of post human condition, a collapse of the anthropocentric through a combined psychoanalytical and metaphysical approach. But it acknowledges the futility in the endeavor, the attempts to relay a state of existence that exists (or does not exist) outside of everything we know (or don’t know) using only those means which we do (or don’t) know. A lovely little read.
Profile Image for Sophie Huang.
13 reviews
January 31, 2026
a book that makes more sense as you read while simultaneously making a little less sense. a quick read that was worth my time, and would pick it back up to read again another day.

it provides an interesting take, one that i myself have experienced before and can relate to due to the consequences of my mental illnesses, but at the same time it felt like we were running in one big circle. the story invoked emotions (vague) and i definitely resonated with it, but it was by no means showstopping
1 review
November 16, 2024
Like a trip into an alternate dimension, 'Notes on Nothing' shakes you out of your comfortable complacency and brings you face to face with the idea of nothing. Is it death? Is it life? Is it the possibility of everything and nothing all at once? Beautifully written, intensely personal, and pretty-much indescribable, I urge you to read this book for a journey into the joy of nothing.
Profile Image for Jonathan Isaac.
43 reviews2 followers
October 7, 2025
A gentle read about the moments when we can transcend our separateness and encounter the Big Nothing. Could read it in an hour, but I naturally wanted to slow down and absorb it over a few days. One I’ll return to, even just for a few pages here and there.
Profile Image for Yess.
27 reviews
Read
May 28, 2025
Recomendado por Fede alvarez described as an hour of blissful meditation
Profile Image for Aaron White.
Author 2 books7 followers
October 15, 2025
A book about No-thing by No-body. This Sense of Someone doesn’t buy it.
Profile Image for Emily Stine.
5 reviews
December 26, 2025
I would say I liked it and I would say it evoked great thought, but “I” am nothing and my thoughts may be not even within me.
Profile Image for Jacob.
30 reviews1 follower
January 23, 2026
A friendly story about nothing by nobody.
Profile Image for Ming Chen.
41 reviews
August 22, 2025
I liked this. It was sweet and I appreciated how although the subject and experience is very much in line with Buddhist traditions the author strayed away from using any prescriptivist language which felt appropriate. I wasn’t super impressed though since I often have similar feelings and experiences myself… the feelings of the boundaries between yourself and the world dissolving, the feeling of looking at an object and seeing nothing only a form, the feeling of being a baby and having all stimuli be unknown… I feel like this all the time. The language was nice though. I especially liked when he compared a person to a whirlpool and defined it as the “grounds of possibility” and a “deep structure”— the structure of someone. I feel like the point of reading and learning about other people is to dissolve, rearrange, stretch, and twist the structure of ourselves and our grounds of possibility. My only issue with this text I think was the constant theorizing(?) that “Nothing is Everything” and “Everything is Nothing”. I didn’t totally understand the point of saying this so much was.
Displaying 1 - 15 of 15 reviews