The trouble with reading a book by Colin Wilson is that he pushes the infinitely curious reader into making yet another list of further books to read. In offering his life-long idea that all of us are only minutes away from achieving the positive state of mind called a 'peak experience,' his quotes range from Aristotle to H G Wells, from William Blake to W B Yeats, even to the wonderful Zen poet, Ikkyu. Essentially this book is an overview, or precis, of his 50 years of reading and writing, highlighting his core notion that the majority of us have an untapped energy resource to hand. As is his usual style, personal anecdotes and stories abound to reinforce this, and on every page, it becomes clearer, that all we need to do is cultivate a life-affirming attitude. Only then we will we be capable of fulfiling the potential of the billions of cells and synapses waiting unused in the brain. He berates Schopenhauer, Samuel Beckett and Sartre for particular views that mostly close off ideas and opportunities for opening up the creative mind, whereas writers such as William James and Walt Whitman are shown to open up infinite possibilities, which, as he suggests we ought to be intent on. This is not another in the great wall of 'self-help' books that abound, but an invitation for you to open a door - and pass through it - all's there and waiting...
I'll add that Mr Wilson is perhaps like a Detective Colombo, for if you doubt he's on the right track, or that he has anything useful to say, he'll get you with that "one last question, if you don't mind -", and then he's got ya wonderin'!