"Blasphemous Novel" as a Reviewer Called It on Goodreads
Posted: Fri Apr 11, 2025 9:58 pm
Insane Entities isn’t your average novel. It’s vague, mysterious, brutal. I know the author personally — great guy, but twisted as hell. He just dropped the book online and refuses to talk about it. Honestly, I’m not hyping it up. I hate flattery — I’m a truth-over-politeness kind of person.
This novel is insane. Brilliantly so. It doesn’t just twist morality — it twists reality itself. It reimagines the divine not as a perfect being, but as a fragmented mind projecting its inner conflict into existence. Evil, in this book, isn’t temptation — it’s a byproduct of divine imbalance, like a human's broken thoughts, except this entity's ideas create literal monsters.
It’s violent, nonlinear, philosophical, nightmare-inducing if read in the right headspace. And that’s what makes it great.
Some quotes that stuck with me:
> “If the prey were evil, the predator would be a saint.”
> “In the beginning, there was light, trapped in a singularity too radiant and good to allow the emission of sorrow. Let there be darkness, was the first thought that triggered the Big Bang. The devil was darkness yearning for existence, and that is why people commit suicide—because they cannot tolerate darkness and sadness; therefore, they cannot tolerate existence.”
If you’re into dark metaphysics, existential horror, and books that feel more like forbidden texts than stories — you might want to look this one up.
This novel is insane. Brilliantly so. It doesn’t just twist morality — it twists reality itself. It reimagines the divine not as a perfect being, but as a fragmented mind projecting its inner conflict into existence. Evil, in this book, isn’t temptation — it’s a byproduct of divine imbalance, like a human's broken thoughts, except this entity's ideas create literal monsters.
It’s violent, nonlinear, philosophical, nightmare-inducing if read in the right headspace. And that’s what makes it great.
Some quotes that stuck with me:
> “If the prey were evil, the predator would be a saint.”
> “In the beginning, there was light, trapped in a singularity too radiant and good to allow the emission of sorrow. Let there be darkness, was the first thought that triggered the Big Bang. The devil was darkness yearning for existence, and that is why people commit suicide—because they cannot tolerate darkness and sadness; therefore, they cannot tolerate existence.”
If you’re into dark metaphysics, existential horror, and books that feel more like forbidden texts than stories — you might want to look this one up.