A Short Stay in Hell
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Author | Steven L. Peck |
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Genre | Psychological horror, philosophical horror |
Publisher | Lulu Enterprises Incorporated (2009), Strange Violin Editions (2012) |
Publication date | 20 June 2009 |
Publication place | United States |
A Short Stay in Hell is a 2009 psychological horror novella by the American writer Steven L. Peck.[1] The events of the story take place in Hell, which has taken the form of a library orders of magnitude larger than the known universe. The story follows the journey of a condemned soul, Soren Johanssen, as he searches for a book that perfectly describes his earthly life. The novel is an exploration of the afterlife, the absurdity of eternity, and the inability of the human mind to process large numbers.
Plot
[edit]Soren, a Mormon geologist that died of cancer, finds himself in the waiting room of Hell. A demon explains that everyone in the room has been condemned for not following the one true religion, Zoroastrianism. Each person in the waiting room is sent to their own personal Hell. The demon sends Soren to the Library of Babel, a gargantuan library bisected by an enormous chasm. The library contains every book that can possibly be written on 410 pages, with 40 lines of 80 characters on each page. Soren realises that he has been restored to peak physical health and endowed with an eidetic memory. Vending machines scattered around the library create any food or drink the souls desire. A sign informs Soren of the rules of Hell: he will be brought back to life if he dies; he is freed from earthly covenants such as marriage; and he is allowed to leave Hell if he finds a book that exactly retells his earthly life story, with no spelling or grammatical errors.
After a week of searching, the souls fail to find a book with even a single line of coherent English. Soren tries coffee for the first time, breaking a lifetime of adherence to Mormon dietary laws. When the souls learn that the vending machines can make alcohol, a member of the group embarks on a drinking binge. An uncomfortable Soren wanders away from the group, trying to find the end of the library's floor.
One hundred years pass. Soren has since reunited with the group, who have organised themselves into a "university" for the study and worship of the few sentences of coherent text that have been discovered. Soren and Rachel, a fellow researcher at the university, fall deeply in love, and they spend one thousand years wandering the library together. In the year 1145, a violent death cult embarks on a spree of violence across the library. Cornered by the cult, Rachel jumps into the chasm, never to be seen again. Soren is captured and subjected to several weeks of torture. When brought before the cult leader, Soren tackles him, sending them both into the chasm.
After a week of falling, Soren is resurrected on a floor far lower in the library. He encounters Master Took, a mathematician that has calculated the true size of library. After centuries of mindless wandering, Soren decides he has nothing to do except start his search from the bottom of the library, and throws himself into the chasm. Eons later, Soren reaches the bottom floor. The story concludes with Soren continuing his search, clinging to the hope that Ahura Mazda, the supreme deity of Zoroastrianism, is appreciative of his efforts.
Structure
[edit]The story itself is framed as a book that Soren has found on his search throughout the library. Time within the narrative is non-linear, and Soren often reflects on past events from the far future.
The novella ends with a mathematical appendix explaining Master Took's calculations. Peck shows that there are books in Soren's personal Hell. To store every book in the library and provide the souls with 100 ft2 of living space, the library would need to be at least light-years wide and deep. In Chapter 1, it is revealed that Soren has spent at least days in Hell; a timespan vastly exceeding the current estimate for the age of the universe (approximately days).[2]
Background
[edit]Soren's personal Hell is a loose adaption of the setting of the 1941 short story The Library of Babel by Jorge Luis Borges. Unlike Borges's novella, wherein the books have a set of 25 characters (22 unknown letters of the Spanish alphabet, the space, the comma, and the full stop),[3] the books in A Short Stay in Hell have 95 characters (the 52 capitalised and uncapitalised characters of the English alphabet, the numbers from 0–9, and 33 punctuation marks).
Like the protagonist of the story, Peck is both a practicing Mormon and a scientist. While Soren is a geologist, Peck is an evolutionary biologist, and works as a biology professor at Brigham Young University.[4][5]
In an interview with Religion News Service, Peck revealed that A Short Stay in Hell was an unsettling story to work on. "If you do a word cloud of my reviews for that book, the most common thing is “disturbing.” It had that effect on me too. Sometimes if there’s something I’m wrestling with, I work through it by writing."[6]
Reception
[edit]Dan Wells, author of I Am Not A Serial Killer, called the book "a terrifying meditation on faith, human nature, and the relentless scope of eternity."[1] Derek Lee of Rational Faiths was "haunted" by the story's themes of endless monotony. "For Peck, Hell isn’t necessarily about being physically tortured or burned à la Dante’s Inferno. [...] Instead, we find a Hell that is about sameness, monotony, mundaneness. Eons and eons of it."[7]
References
[edit]- ^ a b "A Short Stay in Hell". Strange Violin Editions. 23 March 2012. Retrieved 13 May 2025.
- ^ Xiang, Maosheng; Rix, Hans-Walter (24 March 2022). "A time-resolved picture of our Milky Way's early formation history". Nature. 603 (7902): 599–603. arXiv:2203.12110. Bibcode:2022Natur.603..599X. doi:10.1038/s41586-022-04496-5. ISSN 0028-0836. PMC 8942851. PMID 35322254.
- ^ "The Infinite Library of Babel". Nick Parker. Retrieved 13 May 2025.
- ^ "Steven Peck". Biology Department. Retrieved 13 May 2025.
- ^ Admin (6 June 2021). "Steven L. Peck: The 2021 Smith-Pettit Foundation Award for Outstanding Contribution to Mormon Letters". Dawning of a Brighter Day. Retrieved 13 May 2025.
- ^ Riess, Jana (15 September 2017). "Another weird and wonderful Mormon novel from Steven Peck". RNS. Retrieved 13 May 2025.
- ^ Lee, Derek (23 March 2013). "A Short Stay in Hell - A Book Review". Rational Faiths | Mormon Blog. Retrieved 13 May 2025.