Satori can happen at any moment for anyone, offering a glimpse of insight into everything, and it is good to know the thoughtful Daisetsu provided a manual to let us in the West know what to do when it happens, how it connects to a revered practice of meditation and inner peace made popular in parts of Asia. This book is more than a Hitchhikers’ Guide to far out wisdom of the Far East, but a rather more sensible understanding of the many incarnations of Buddha, the Bodhisattva and Arhats who inspired such contemplative devoting across India, China and Japan. There is also the intriguing notions about space and time, particularly an understanding of place in both the past and future, that is understated throughout the prayers, teachings and admonitions that curiously get treated like it ain’t no thing, and perhaps there is some subtle proof that then and there is no different than here and now.