Thank you everyone for commenting.
I would recommend checking out his earlier stuff as well as the nocturnes (Le Jardin Parfume, Gullistan, Djami, etc.). He wrote some really wonderful music that I believe most anyone would be able to appreciate.
[Please forgive my misunderstanding of the line of thought in the precedeing messages and just focus on the content of my message.

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Really?!? "In the Hothouse" dates from 1918, and was one of his earliest ventures into the Nocturne style. The other luxurious works mentioned were written in 1923 (Le jardin parfume), 1928 "Nocturne:
Djami, and (my favorite) 1940 "Gulistan".
These are some of the most accessible, relatively speaking for the listener, but not necessarily for the performer. I think your reading of "In the hothouse" is a great shot at working with this early example of Sorabji's nocturne idiom. Keep at it.
If anyone wants to take on another early KSS masterpeice, try the "Prelude, Interlude and Fugue" from 1920-22. This one of the most startling and intense works of his early years. Michael Habermann's stunning live performance MHS/MusicMasters from the late 1980's is jaw dropping in its execution. The score is not at all expensive and available from the Sorabji Archive. When you see what's flowing under the fingers (especially in the prelude) there's nothing in the entire piano literature that compares (IMHO).

Keep working at it. Sorabji may be a strange taste to many, but the deeper you look, the more you (might) see.
Lontano