An all-encompassing guide to yoga traces its historical traditions and roots in sacred texts as well as its top modern practitioners, offering four hundred illustrations that demonstrate key postures. Reprint.
If you are a yoga practitioner who learns by visuals, there is no reason why you shouldn't own a copy of Yoga. It's in affordable paperback, making it that much more portable too. From sun salutations, standing poses, balance poses, backbend poses, seated poses, inversions to supine poses, Yoga has absolutely stunning photographs of teachers in their prime, captured in a moment of unbelievable alignment. It's inspiring to glance through its pages to see what the body can do, and to motivate your personal yogic journey.
Of equal value is the introduction, "The History of Yoga", by Linda Sparrowe. The former managing editor of Yoga Journal, Sparrowe did her undergraduate and graduate studies at UC Berkeley with a focus on Vedic and yoga history and the Sanskrit language, and her expert knowledge on the subject matter makes "The History of Yoga" an extremely helpful and concise explanation into the yogic tradition. Sparrowe traces yoga's earliest origins, delineating in a simple fashion, the traditions, texts and paths of yoga that have flourished throughout history. I expect I'll return to the introduction to refresh my memory from time to time.
What was of particular interest to me lies in the final section of "The History of Yoga" where Sparrowe answers the question of how and why we, collectively as a human species, have all understood yoga to be a transnational synonym for physical asana. The yoga tradition is much more than about physical postures and historically-speaking the focus was on seated postures! So why the discrepancy? Hatha yoga may have inspired the current manifestation of yoga as a primarily physical path, but Sparrowe points out how much the groundwork was laid out by the force of popular yogis and their teachings (T. Krishnamacharya of Mysore, Swami Sivananda in Rishikesh and their disciples) as well as their appropriation of European gymnastics. These twin forces played a pivotal role in rehabilitating yoga's former kooky image into a much more familiar one of healthy exercise backed up by the merits of science.
Sparrowe provides light to the reader into how much of a modern invention is the yoga practice we know and love today.
Love this book! It's on my list for my yoga teacher training as a work of reference and a source of inspiration. It mostly consists of absolutely gorgeous pictures displaying 400 poses, including many variations. Each of these pictures is a little piece of art. There are no instructions as to how to do these poses, but there's no need to. These pictures should just be as they are beautiful.
There's a short history of yoga at the beginning of the book. It's clear and concise, and takes you as a student through all the periods and concepts that shape today's yoga. It's a pleasant read and provides a nice overview. I'm certain I will use this book often to craft my classes, but I would highly recommend this to anyone remotely interested in yoga!
This is the most beautiful book of Yoga photography. All in black and white and featuring some of the most famous/proficient teachers from around the world, it's a must have for anyone interested in yogic practice. Additionally, it offers great examples of advanced variations of basic positions, so as you practice you know what you're aiming for. I keep this in my car side door to entertain passengers when they get bored. Seriously.
Really cool coffee table type book. Amazing photographs. It doesn't have description on how to do the poses or anything, just the photos of masters doing them and the name of the pose. Also includes a nice history on yoga at the beginning of the book. It's not the type of book you want to learn form or figure yoga out, but it's truly beautiful as art.
One of my favorite books. Why would they write "Not a Book" next to the author? The first 64 pages is a dense, articulate summary of Yoga history. Beautiful photos of art and yogis support the text. There is a short bio for each of the yogis shown doing postures. There's an index, if you ever need it, as this is the iconic "Flip through book". I see I reviewed this book initially back in 2013, 7 years ago, and the book has still not been put into storage. It is now the best Dogeared, book that I love to flip through.
A book of revered yogis and yoginis executing flawless asanas, apparently effortlessly. The photographs are beautiful and fascinating in their detail and starkness. I pull it out for inspiration for my own practice and simply to enjoy seeing postures done so well.
No words, of any review, can express the enthusiasm I've come to share with the creators of this marvelous introduction to Yoga. The book begins with awesome writings on everything Yoga that will leave you feeling blessed with a wholesome, unbiased education and inspired by the dedication behind it. The majority of the book however, is a beautifully photographed display of superbly selected yoga positions that serve as the ultimate quick reference for further research, inspiration, and hopefully not too much self experimentation.
Having done a bit of yoga, I can recognize how much strength and body awareness a lot of these poses require, and it's an impressive collection, though some of these seem too complicated to be useful, but then again, my yoga practice is admittedly fairly basic. No step-by-step instructions here, just a series of inspiring black and white photographs. It would be a lovely gift/coffee table book for a yoga enthusiast.
how the hell did they get into that position? - pictures! And some interesting blurb on key poses i.e. balance, standing, inversions etc, with inspiring quotes/mantras
this isn't a book you read and put back on the shelf. I will read, reread, reference and learn from this forever. Wonderful facts, history and lessons. Amazing and beautiful photography.