A thought-provoking collection of the most notable and insightful Buddhism-inspired writing published in the last • Thich Nhat Hanh’s vision for a more enlightened and sustainable society • Ezra Bayda on avoiding the pitfalls that arise on the path of meditation • Tsoknyi Rinpoche’s powerful Dzogchen practices that help you to discover your mind’s inherent awareness and clarity • Lodro Rinzler on what happens when the Buddha walks into a bar • Karen Maezen Miller on the virtues of boredom • Phillip Moffitt on how to transform emotional chaos into confidence and clarity • Joseph Goldstein’s unique nine-minute meditation practice that you can incorporate into your busy day • Elihu Genmyo Smith on being still • Pema Chödrön on how to become a bodhisattva • Sakyong Mipham on how mind, breath, and energy work together in meditation to transform your life • Judy Lief on the fifty-nine ancient slogans that can help you be more skillful and loving in all your relationships • Bonnie Friedman on discovering nonattachment while apartment-hopping in Brooklyn • Jules Shuzen Harris on what anger can teach you • Pico Iyer on travel as contemplative practice • And much more
I have heard very good reports on Shambhala's "The Best Buddhist Writing" series, so I was excited to have the chance to read an ARC of the 2013 edition via Netgalley. I found this volume to have a wide-ranging collection of essays and excerpts from books covering everything from introductions to meditation and to basic concepts in Buddhism, to engaging slice-of-life essays exploring how the writers incorporate mindfulness in hectic lives, and even a piece in which Kay Larson traces the influences of Buddhism on John Cage's 4'33" (drawing on her work in her book Where the Heart Beats: John Cage, Zen Buddhism, and the Inner Life of Artists. The Table of Contents presents a who's who of Buddhist writers, both established writers and relative newcomers: Pema Chödrön, Thich Nhat Hanh, Joseph Goldstein, Natalie Goldberg, Sylvia Boorstein, Dzongsar Khyentse, Sakyong Mipham, Norman Fischer, Philip Moffitt, Karen Miller, Tsoknyi Rinpoche, Kay Larson, and Lodro Rinzler. This volume is a wonderful introduction to recent writings on Buddhism and mindfulness, and should help readers to find new favorite writers in the field.
This collection of essays and excerpts on Buddhist thought and action is very readable and useful. Thich Nhat Hanh, Pema Chodron, and Joseph Epstein all contribute and they are very important practitioners and teachers. Read as a whole there is some repetition, but mostly just useful advice on meditation and right views and actions. I enjoyed it.
A collection of articles written by authors with different backgrounds. Some are good and informative, some are shallow, some are contradictory with each other. But overall, it's a good overview about Buddhism and its ideology.
From time to time I like to read collections of shorts by various writers. This gives me a chance to sample different tastes; tasting a bit of each and finding the ones I like the best. I found a few here.
I wanted to read just one chapter in this book - the one by Judy Lief where she helps make sense of the 59 lojohn slogans (I was a bit befuddled with them), and I ended up reading the whole book. Enjoyed each chapter; I suspect useful reading no matter what "level" you of Buddhism you are at.
I like these collections because they give me bite sized hunks of Buddhist thought from a wide range of people form different backgrounds and points of view. They just keep me thinking about the right things in the right way and challenge my own preconceived ideas; a kind of spiritual lubricant. Occasionally there will be contained within them one of two texts that will really hit home and blow some part of my mind, they were here in this one, particularly the text by Ezra Bayda. I had noit heard of him before but I will now seek out his writings.
I am not a Buddhist, but I am fascinated by Buddhist spirituality. This collection of essays provided me with a helpful introduction to the variety of writing that is happening under the Buddhist umbrella. There were a few amazing essays in the collection -- essays that I will be thinking about for many years to come, including Bonnie Friedman's "The Vagabond Queen of Craigslist" and Natalie Goldberg's "Waking Up to Happiness," but the collection got bogged down by others that were highly theoretical and not particularly accessible to a newbie like me.
This series is always fantastic. Lots of really great essays in here that are a good balance between things that are deep and rich for the practitioner/believer and those who see Buddhism more as a toolkit for the everyday. There are a great diversity of writers here from many backgrounds and belief systems, and the styles are very diverse as well. There is something really stimulating or useful in each essay for thinking about Buddhism.