We live in an age that produces books the way factories produce disposable objects. They arrive quickly, shine briefly, circulate noisily, and vanish without leaving any true mark on the inner life of mankind. The market celebrates quantity, visibility, speed, branding, self-promotion, emotional convenience, fashionable slogans, and instant applause. What it fears is depth. What it avoids is silence. What it rejects is the difficult labor of truth. Much of what is called literature today has become an accessory of the entertainment system. It seeks consumers more than readers. It seeks reactions more than reflection. It seeks identity labels more than universal human experience. It seeks trend and tribe more than wisdom. It often speaks loudly because it has little to say. Real literature was never created to flatter the age. It was born to disturb illusions, to unveil hypocrisy, to descend into the abyss of conscience, to illuminate suffering, desire, power, betrayal, memory, mortality, destiny. It gave language to what people feel but cannot name. It confronted the sacred and the criminal, the erotic and the tragic, the intimate and the historical. It was dangerous because it was alive. Today many books are engineered for consumption before they are written. Their themes are selected by market instinct. Their style is reduced to easy surfaces. Their emotions are pre-packaged. Their rebellions are safe. Their provocations are approved in advance. Their scandals are temporary marketing devices. Their language often lacks vitality, gravity, rhythm, architecture. A civilization declines when words lose weight. When language becomes decorative, thought becomes weak. When thought becomes weak, institutions become theatrical. When institutions become theatrical, society drifts toward emptiness while imagining itself progressive. The crisis of literature is never only literary. It is civilizational. I do not say that all contemporary writing is worthless. There are still serious minds, solitary talents, hidden masters, disciplined voices working outside the noise. They exist in obscurity, in small rooms, in silence, in stubborn independence. They write because they must. They write against fashion. They write against reward. They write because language still matters. The task of the serious reader is therefore noble. One must learn again how to recognize substance. One must distrust the machinery of hype. One must distinguish confession from art, ideology from thought, sensation from intensity, novelty from greatness, visibility from value. One must return to standards that require effort, patience, memory, comparison, seriousness. The future of literature will not be saved by algorithms, prizes, trends, social approval, or cultural bureaucracy. It will be saved by individuals capable of inner freedom. By writers who accept solitude. By readers who seek transformation rather than distraction. By minds willing to stand apart from the crowd. The great books of the past still breathe because they were written from necessity. They came from collision with reality. They came from torment, discipline, contemplation, moral struggle, metaphysical hunger, historical pressure, erotic fire, spiritual crisis. They were not assembled to fill a seasonal slot in the marketplace. Our age needs fewer books and greater books. Fewer voices seeking attention and more voices seeking truth. Fewer products and more works. Fewer performances and more revelations. If modern pseudo-literature is a mass-produced object, then the answer is clear. Refuse the factory. Seek the forge. Enter the library as one enters a temple of combat. Read deeply. Think slowly. Judge independently. Demand greatness again.
Roberto Minichini
April 2026






