Thought provoking, and an interesting perspective on the social exhaustion we feel in the air at present, but its impression doesn't last. 'Libido' is a vaguely defined term here, supposedly something like a 'life-force' that is present when involved in cooking a fulfilling meal to thinking or feeling as part of a group enterprise. Too vague almost to feel the thread of a strong argument. Indeed, it may be better approached as a lecture, rather than a book, as it has a meandering quality abotu it. On the other hand insights around the exploration glimmer in the background. Brief forays into the past, including the utopianism of past communes and parochial superstitions reveal the way desire was rooted in the way they saw the world. It extended past only the experience of humans and animals, but even to trees and brooks. The comprehensiveness of the world-view shown he contrasts with our situation now, interpellated as 'neo-pavlovian mammals,' 'trapped in our digital enclosures', having reached 'peak libido'. Interesting, but I wish there was more meat to the bone here. For that matter, more bone for the meat, too.