<b><i>Life Is Hard</i> is a humane consolation for challenging times. Reading it is like speaking with a thoughtful friend who never tells you to cheer up, but, by offering gentle companionship and a change of perspective, makes you feel better anyway.</b>
The New York Times Book Review
<b>At last a philosopher tackles the meaning of life and comes up with useful answers</b>
- James McConnachie, The Sunday Times
<b>Through carefully crafted examples, [Kieran Setiya] makes the case that philosophy can help us navigate the adversities of human life </b>... No life worth living is free of suffering and pain. Better to face it with the clarity to which philosophy, at its best, aspires
Guardian
<p>Attentive readers of this humane, intelligent book will come away with a firmer grasp and better descriptions of<br />whatever it is that ails them or those they cherish</p>
Economist
Kieran Setiya argues that certain bracing challenges-loneliness, failure, ill health, grief, and so on-are essentially unavoidable ... But it's good, the book shows, to acknowledge hard experiences and ask how they've helped us grow tougher, kinder, and wiser
- Joshua Rothman, New Yorker