Liber amoris: The new pygmalion presents an intimate study of overwhelming affection and the inner conflict that arises when deep longing is not returned with equal intensity. The narrative follows a figure caught between idealized devotion and the painful awareness that the emotional bond being pursued may never reach fulfillment. Through reflective moments and emotionally charged exchanges, the book explores how desire can distort perception, heighten sensitivity, and intensify vulnerability. The central relationship becomes a lens through which broader ideas about attachment, personal expectation, and social pressures are examined, showing how individuals often struggle to balance heartfelt impulses with the realities set before them. The story gradually reveals the toll that such emotional imbalance takes, portraying affection as both a source of uplift and a cause of profound distress. As the book unfolds, it emphasizes how unreturned longing can shape identity, influence behavior, and challenge one’s sense of stability, creating a portrait of love marked by intensity, conflict, and quiet desperation.
William Hazlitt was an English essayist, critic, social commentator, painter, and philosopher whose work left a lasting influence on the study of literature and human behavior. Born in Maidstone on 10 April 1778 to William Hazlitt and Grace Loftus, he developed a wide range of intellectual interests that shaped his later writings. His career brought him recognition for his sharp insight into drama, poetry, and the complexities of ordinary life, earning him a place among the most respected voices in English letters. His analyses often reflected a deep understanding of emotion, imagination, and the contradictions within human nature, allowing him to stand alongside figures such as Samuel Johnson and George Orwell in critical importance. Throughout his life, he engaged with prominent thinkers of his time and was influenced by major literary figures including William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge. His legacy includes contributions to literary criticism, political commentary, and cultural discourse, and he continued to write and reflect on society until his death in London on 18 September 1830 at the age of fifty two.