A relaxed chat with the Buddha tells us what he thought about impermanence, karma, mindfulness, compassion, love, and everything else that leads us toward a true understanding of ourselves and the cosmos.
We know him as the Buddha, the “Awakened One”. Born Siddhartha Gautama 2,500 years ago in northern India, he became one of the world’s greatest spiritual leaders. He suffered as we do, then by his own efforts found the key to liberation from the bonds of desire, hatred and ignorance. As Westerners living in relative prosperity, we can identify with this man who had it all – love, success, money, talent, privilege – but set these things aside to search for something deeper and more enduring. This book presents an account of the Buddha’s life followed by a series of plausible and illuminating but imagined conversations, which probe all aspects of his philosophy for living. The insights he conveys here offer us practical wisdom for a better life.
I used to be the person who goes into a bookshop, picks up a book and finishes reading it there. But somehow I didn't do it after shifting to Europe. Finally I'm back on track of doing so. Went to Passa Porta (Brussels), and finished this book there.
I actually know quite a bit about Buddha's life, so this book could not provide me with anything new. But for newbies who want to know about Buddha or Buddhism, this can be a good and easy read.
A different way to get information about the Buddha - in an interview format. There is some biography information at the beginning then goes into an interview. Really nice way to get information if not wanting to go into the nonfiction books out there. Nice series.
It's definitely an interesting format. This takes the form of a dialogue between the Buddha and an interviewer, like at a symposium instead of a newscast. It's didactic tone is not overhanded, but also just slightly more than necessary. The Buddha comes across even and mostly calm. There are a few times where it seems he's almost amused at the interviewer's ignorance about a topic. I could absolutely be reading too much into this.
The content is good, if basic. It's conveyed well. I wish some aspects would have been explored more, explained with more detail and more clarity. But, this is a rather basic primer to Buddhist philosophy. And in that, it gets the point across nicely. I just wish this was more of a dialogue, exploring the interviewer's viewpoint as well as Buddha's. In some respects, this is like a Plato/Aristotle dialogue where a character asks the philosopher a series of questions to answer, but it is still a Q and A session more than a dialogue.
This is very good and that's why I upped my score to a 4 star. It is pleasant and short. A taste of Buddhist philosophy "directly" from the Buddha himself.
The Great novelty of this book is that Buddha speaks back to the author and answers seemingly interesting questions like, "Why do you profess celibacy?", "Why did you abandon your family?" Or "How can you advise married people when you abandoned your family?" Most of them are common sense answers if we know the life of the Buddha. I expected more depth and more nuanced questions and answers from this book. Sigh.
Buddha once said “He who sees me sees the Dharma, and whoever sees the Dharma sees me” I’ve always been drawn to Buddha’s enlightenment journey. An abridged version of Buddha’s biography and Buddhism. A good start if you want to go deeper.
This provided a quick idea of what the Buddha's approximate teaching are based on research and presented as a Q&A. Buddhism seems to boil down to mindfulness, generosity, detachment from desire, and seeking inner happiness/nirvana/enlightenment. It is actually more Jedi-like than anything I've ever read and I'm eager to read more Buddhist books in the future.
I could understand the life of Buddha, and it's a short summary of his life and believes. However, for me, sometimes it was boring, and was difficult at the end to finish it.