Category: buddhism

  • Silence of the Leaving
    Awake at the Bedside: Contemplative Teachings on Palliative and End-of-Life Care.  Edited by Koshin Paley Ellison and Matt Weingast.  Wisdom Publications.  346 pp.  $19.95. This all began when Koshin Paley Ellison’s Grandma Mimi—certainly the most adorable character in this book, and perhaps the wisest—asked if he could look after her while she stayed in New York.  ...
    Read more
  • Astonishing Eloquence
    Mindfulness in Action by Chogyam Trungpa.  Edited by Carolyn Rose Gimian.  Shambhala.  196 pp.  $21.95. In times of anxiety and difficulty—which this summer has certainly been—I find myself drifting back to the books and teachers that were foundational to me.  I’ve been trying to make my way through Dogen this summer, but that’s like trying to ...
    Read more
  • Exquisitely Divine
    Border Town by Shen Congwen.  Harperperennial.  169 pp. $13.99 Border Town is what reviewers call a quiet novel, so quiet it might not be heard at all.  It is the story of a Chinese girl and her grandfather who live near a town named Caodong in the early part of the twentieth century.  The grandfather operates ...
    Read more
  • Angry Men and Wild Women
    12 Angry Men a film by Sydney Lumet.  With Henry Fonda, Lee J. Cobb, Martin Balsam. ***** Ghostbusters a film by Paul Feig.  With Melissa McCarthy, Kristen Wiig, Kate McKinnon, Leslie Jones. **** Last spring my wife and I saw By Sydney Lumet at the Full Frame Documentary Film Festival, and set about watching the work of ...
    Read more
  • Unrepeatable Miracle
    Stimp Hawkins, 1933-2016 My friend Stimp Hawkins died in mid-June, but I just found out, almost by accident, this past weekend.  He’d gotten in touch with me several months ago to let me know about an article that had just come out about his new career as what he called a death pimp, and we agreed ...
    Read more
  • Becoming the True Self
    The Blake Project: Eternity’s Sunrise: The Imaginative World of William Blake by Leo Damrosch.  Yale University Press.  332 pp. In my last post in the Blake project, I spoke of a book that my wife was reading but that I had avoided because I wanted to explore my own reading of Blake’s work.  That strategy worked ...
    Read more
  • He’s the Best Friend I’ve Ever Had.  He Does Fart a Lot.  He’s Also Dead.
    Swiss Army Man.  A film by Dan Kwan and Daniel Scheinert.  With Paul Dano and Daniel Radcliffe. People say this about movies all the time, but in this case I feel fully confident: you’ve never seen anything like Swiss Army Man. Hank (Paul Dano) has somehow gotten stranded on the proverbial desert island.  He has all the ...
    Read more
  • All Religions Are One
    The Blake Project: All Religions Are One; There Is No Natural Religion; The Book of Thel; Songs of Innocence and Experience; The Marriage of Heaven and Hell I first studied William Blake in my survey of English literature course at Duke University.  To say that I was excited would be a vast understatement: I had a ...
    Read more
  • Fearful Symmetry
    Blake by Peter Ackroyd.  Knopf.  399 pp. My re-kindled interest in Blake began, weirdly enough, when I ordered some copies of Shambhala: The Sacred Path of the Warrior for some inmates and noticed that the most perceptive Amazon review was written by a woman named Laurie from New Zealand.  I clicked to see the rest of ...
    Read more
  • Whattya Know?
    Don’t Be a Jerk: And Other Practical Advice from Dogen, Japan’s Greatest Zen Master By Brad Warner.  New World Library.  306 pp.  $16.95. [This is the seventh and final piece in a series on Dogen’s Zen, inspired by Brad Warner’s new book paraphrasing fascicles of the Shobogenzo.  Earlier articles are here, here, here, here, here, and ...
    Read more
  • Beyond Belief
    Don’t Be a Jerk: And Other Practical Advice from Dogen, Japan’s Greatest Zen Master By Brad Warner.  New World Library.  306 pp.  $16.95. [This is the sixth in a series on Dogen’s Zen, inspired by Brad Warner’s new book paraphrasing fascicles of the Shobogenzo.  This series has got to end sometime but hasn’t ended yet.  Earlier ...
    Read more
  • The Precepts Are the Mind of the Buddha
    Don’t Be a Jerk: And Other Practical Advice from Dogen, Japan’s Greatest Zen Master By Brad Warner.  New World Library.  306 pp.  $16.95. [This is the fifth in a series on Dogen’s Zen, inspired by Brad Warner’s new book paraphrasing fascicles of the Shobogenzo.  Earlier articles are here, here, here, and here.  My review of the ...
    Read more
  • Deep Wisdom
    Don’t Be a Jerk: And Other Practical Advice from Dogen, Japan’s Greatest Zen Master By Brad Warner.  New World Library.  306 pp.  $16.95. [This is the fourth in a series on Dogen’s Zen, inspired by Brad Warner’s new book paraphrasing fascicles of the Shobogenzo.  Earlier articles are here and here and here.  My review of the book ...
    Read more
  • The Process of Zazen
    Don’t Be a Jerk: And Other Practical Advice from Dogen, Japan’s Greatest Zen Master By Brad Warner.  New World Library.  306 pp.  $16.95. [This is the third in a series on Dogen’s Zen, inspired by Brad Warner’s new book paraphrasing fascicles of the Shobogenzo.  Earlier articles are here and here.  My review of the book is ...
    Read more
  • Zazen is a Physical Practice
    Don’t Be a Jerk: And Other Practical Advice from Dogen, Japan’s Greatest Zen Master By Brad Warner.  New World Library.  306 pp.  $16.95. Still pondering Brad Warner’s book.  Dogen goes on and on. Brad does a paraphrase of the Fukanzazengi, the meditation instructions Dogen wrote (and largely cribbed from a Chinese document) when he returned to Japan ...
    Read more
  • Zazen is For Everybody
    Don’t Be a Jerk: And Other Practical Advice from Dogen, Japan’s Greatest Zen Master By Brad Warner.  New World Library.  306 pp.  $16.95. A couple of weeks ago I wrote a review of Brad Warner’s latest book, which I regard as his richest and most helpful to date.  I had hoped to go into various themes ...
    Read more
  • Renegade Zen Man
    Don’t Be a Jerk: And Other Practical Advice from Dogen, Japan’s Greatest Zen Master By Brad Warner.  New World Library.  306 pp.  $16.95. Brad Warner is that rare thing, a Buddhist teacher who primarily teaches by writing.  In fact—though he leads retreats and gives lectures, does podcasts and has even appeared in a movie or two—I ...
    Read more
  • The Texture of Every Day
    Jim Harrison 1937-2016 I’ve been haunted this week by the death of Jim Harrison, whom I’ve described for years as my favorite living writer and whose books I bought as soon as they came out, without reading a review or glancing through them.  Only once did he let me down.  I’ve wondered specifically if The Ancient ...
    Read more
  • True Zen Man II
    No Beginning, No End: The Intimate Heart of Zen by Jakusho Kwong.  Edited by Peter Levitt.  Shambhala.  256 pp. $19.95. I like what I think of as the original teachers, the people who were prominent where I first began practicing Buddhism in 1991.  My all-time favorite is Shunryu Suzuki, whose Zen Mind, Beginner’s Mind was the ...
    Read more
  • She Wasn’t Just a Dotty Old Lady
    Iris Murdoch As I Knew Her by A.N. Wilson.  Arrow Books.  276 pp. Those Brits do keep writing, don’t they?  I look at the titles by A. N. Wilson, who is my rough contemporary (two years younger than I, actually) and I’m astonished, and somewhat ashamed, to see thirty books.  (Compared to six for me.  Eight ...
    Read more