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Simon St?lenhag

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Simon St?lenhag


Born
in Sweden
January 20, 1984

Genre


Konstn?ren och f?rfattaren Simon St?lenhag ?r mest k?nd f?r sina digitala m?lningar som ofta visar vardagliga scener med fantastiska inslag. Efter sitt genombrott 2013 har St?lenhag publicerat tv? b?cker om ett alternativt 1980- och 90-tal p? M?lar?arna utanf?r Stockholm. Ur varselklotet (2014) och Flodsk?rden (2016) har hyllats b?de i Sverige och utomlands. Den ansedda tidningen The Guardian korade Ur varselklotet till en av tidernas b?sta dystopier, i s?llskap med Franz Kafkas Processen och Andrew Niccols Gattaca.

Simon St?lenhags evokativa och filmlika bildspr?k har v?ckt uppm?rksamhet ?ven i film- och datorspelsv?rlden. Han har verkat som konceptillustrat?r och manusf?rfattare i ett flertal projekt. St?lenhag har medverkat i Searching fo
...more

Average rating: 4.32 · 16,481 ratings · 2,468 reviews · 17 distinct works ? Similar authors
The Electric State (Tales f...

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Tales from the Loop (Tales ...

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Things from the Flood (Tale...

4.32 avg rating — 2,080 ratings — published 2016 — 19 editions
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The Labyrinth

4.16 avg rating — 1,741 ratings — published 2020 — 15 editions
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Urtidsbilder

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4.01 avg rating — 67 ratings — published 2019 — 5 editions
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Tales from the Loop: Our Fr...

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3.80 avg rating — 66 ratings — published 2017 — 3 editions
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The Electric State. Rolepla...

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Þ’»·¼ÇÒäÈþ²¿Çú£ºÞ’È¦ÆæÌ·³ÝºéË®¹ýºó³Ýµç»Ã¹ú¶È

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Sunset at Zero Point

3.71 avg rating — 7 ratings4 editions
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Swedish Machines: Ein illus...

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0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings — published 2025
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More books by Simon St?lenhag…
Tales from the Loop Things from the Flood The Electric State
(3 books)
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4.35 avg rating — 14,120 ratings

Related News

? They say that the movie is never as good as the book, but at Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ we don¡¯t think it¡¯s a competition! ? Sci-fi, AI, cyborgs, bots,...
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Quotes by Simon St?lenhag  (?)
Quotes are added by the Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ community and are not verified by Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ.

“Lighthouse keepers were once warned they shouldn¡¯t listen to the sea for too long; likewise, you could hear voices in the static and lose your mind. It was as if there were a code in there¡ªa code that could, as soon as your mind detected it, irrevocably conjure demons from the depths.”
Simon St?lenhag, The Electric State

“In the beginning, God created the neuron, and when electricity flowed through the three-dimensional nerve cell matrix in the brain, there was consciousness.”
Simon St?lenhag, The Electric State

“Do you know how the brain works? Do you have any idea of what we know about how the brain and consciousness work? Us humans, I mean. And I'm not talking about some new-age hocus-pocus, I'm talking about the sum of the knowledge compiled by disciplined scientists over three hundred years through arduous experiments and skeptic vetting of theories. I'm talking about the insights you gain by actually poking around inside people's heads, studying human behavior, and conducting experiments to figure out the truth, and separating that from all the bullshit about the brain and consciousness that has no basis in reality whatsoever. I'm talking about the understanding of the brain that has resulted in things like neuronic warfare, the neurographic network, and Sentre Stimulus TLEs. How much do you really know about that?
I suppose you still have the typical twentieth-century view of the whole thing. The self is situated in the brain somehow, like a small pilot in a cockpit behind your eyes. You believe that it is a mix of memories and emotions and things that make you cry, and all that is probably also inside your brain, because it would be strange if that were inside your heart, which you've been taught is a muscle. But at the same time you're having trouble reconciling with the fact that all that is you, all your thoughts and experiences and knowledge and taste and opinions, should exist inside your cranium. So you tend not to dwell on such questions, thinking ¡°There's probably more to it¡± and being satisfied with a fuzzy image of a gaseous, transparent Something floating around in an undefined void.
Maybe you don't even put it into words, but we both know that you're thinking about an archetypical soul. You believe in an invisible ghost.”
Simon St?lenhag, The Electric State



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