Category: religion

  • What Makes a Religion?
    The Circle of the Way: A Concise History of Zen from the Buddha to the Modern World by Barbara O’Brien.  Shambhala.  316 pp. $19.95. **** I’ve been asking myself what makes a religion ever since I read Karen Armstrong’s marvelous The Lost Art of Scripture.  There, in that cataloging of the world’s vast scriptures, Christianity almost ...
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  • Portrait of the Artist as a Young Hasid
    My Name Is Asher Lev a novel by Chaim Potok.  Anchor Books. 369 pp. $15.95. **** When I was looking through Goodreads trying to decide if I wanted to read another Chaim Potok novel, I came across a reviewer who said—about this book, I believe—“Chaim Potok refuses to write a page turner.”  I thought that an ...
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  • Listening to the Other
    The Chosen a novel by Chaim Potok.  Ballantine Books.  299 pp. $7.99. The Promise a novel by Chaim Potok.  Anchor Books.  368 pp. $7.48. I sometimes think there is some kind of spirit around—because of these two books, let’s call it a dybbuk—who directs me to this or that book at the appropriate moment of my life.  ...
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  • What Scripture Is For
    The Lost Art of Scripture: Rescuing the Sacred Texts by Karen Armstrong.  Knopf.  605 pp.  $35.00.   ***** The Lost Art of Scripture is a colossal feat of scholarship; I can’t think of one I admire more.  Karen Armstrong has studied scriptures from a wide variety of cultures, and summed up the basic messages from the scripture ...
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  • Is Kensho Necessary?
    One Blade of Grass: Finding the Old Road of the Heart by Henry Shukman.  Counterpoint.  339 pp. $16.95. **** Henry Shukman had an interesting life as a writer even before he began spiritual practice, but this memoir centers on his practice and wouldn’t exist without it.  He is British and grew up in Oxford, the child ...
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  • Repose and Bliss My Ass
    Sesshin Strikes Again “The zazen I speak of is not learning meditation. It is simply the Dharma gate of repose and bliss. . . . Traps and snares can never reach it.”  Fukanzazengi , Eihei Dogen. I am often struck, let’s make that always struck, by the sick feeling of dread I have every year as our winter ...
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  • Family Reunion
    The Irishman a film by Martin Scorsese.  With Robert DeNiro, Al Pacino, Joe Pesci, Anna Paquin, Ray Romano.  ***** Toward the end of The Irishman, the former union boss and mobster Frank Sheeran (Robert DeNiro) is looking through some photos in a nursing home while a nurse takes his blood pressure.  He asks her if she knows ...
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  • Master and Disciple
    The Gift of Rain a novel by Tan Twan Eng.  Weinstein Books.  432 pp.  $16.99.  **** The Gift of Rain is one of the most affecting novels I’ve read in years; toward the end I was both riveted to and deeply disturbed by what I was reading, so that I could hardly sleep.  This is Tan ...
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  • She’s Trapped But Her Voice Is Free
    Milkman a novel by Anna Burns.  Graywolf Press.  348 pp.  $16.00 ****1/2 Milkman is simultaneously one of the most terrifying and hilarious novels in recent memory.  It’s terrifying because it portrays a society where the two sides are locked in such mortal combat that people have become dreadfully paranoid; to express a shred of compassion for ...
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  • Words For What Is Beyond Words
    Secret Body: Erotic and Esoteric Currents in the History of Religions by Jeffrey J. Kripal.  University of Chicago Press.  478 pp. Jeffrey J. Kripal is a religious writer like no other I’ve ever read.  He grew up as a Catholic in Nebraska, for instance (there are Catholics in Nebraska?)  He was devout, actually entered a seminary ...
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  • We’re the Understory
    The Overstory a novel by Richard Powers.  Norton.  502 pp.  $18.95 The Overstory is nothing if not ambitious.  It begins by introducing nine characters in brief vignettes, summing up their lives to a certain point; each of these characters, we have a feeling, could inhabit a novel of their own.  The one thing they have in ...
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  • Old Lady Koans
    The Hidden Lamp: Stories from Twenty-Five Centuries of Awakened Women.  Edited by Florence Caplow and Susan Moon.  Wisdom Publications.  455 pp.  $18.95 Among my favorite Zen teachings are the Old Lady stories, where some pompous Zen master thinks a great deal of himself and has his bubble burst by a woman who has no apparent status ...
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  • Good Could Have Been Great
    My Year of Dirt and Water: Journal of a Zen Monk’s Wife in Japan by Tracy Franz.  Stone Bridge Press.  306 pp. $16.95.  ***1/2 I don’t believe in publishing pages from a journal.  I’m all for keeping a journal (Thoreau is one of my heroes); it’s an invaluable practice to sit down every day and review ...
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  • Sweet Sorrow
    The Farewell a film by Lulu Wang.  With Awkwafina, Shuzshen Zhao, Tzi Ma, Diana Lin.  **** I somehow got the feeling from this movie’s trailer—which I’ve seen a number of times—that it was a cute little comedy about pulling the wool over an old lady’s eyes about her cancer diagnosis, just so she wouldn’t be discouraged.  ...
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  • If We Just Knew What Mind Is
    How to Change Your Mind: What the New Science of Psychedelics Teaches Us About Consciousness, Dying, Addiction, Depression, and Transcendence by Michael Pollan.  Penguin Press.  465 pp. How’s that for a sub-title?  Why didn’t he just add, the Universe? Except that in some ways that does describe what Michael Pollan’s book is about.  It’s also about the ...
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  • Too Much Thinking
    Call It Grace: Finding Meaning in a Fractured World by Serene Jones.  Viking.  310 pp. ***1/2 Four Men Shaking: Searching for Sanity with Samuel Beckett, Norman Mailer, and My Perfect Zen Teacher by Lawrence Shainberg.  Shambhala.  134 pp. $16.95.  ****1/2 “To stop your mind does not mean to stop the activities of mind. It means your mind ...
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  • Fools’
    Paradise a novel by Toni Morrison.  Vintage.  318 pp.  $16.00 I can agree that Beloved is Toni Morrison’s masterpiece, but in some ways I found Paradise a more inventive and intricate novel.  It’s the story of a fictional town in Oklahoma that was settled in the mid-twentieth century by African Americans who had been turned away ...
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  • And Actually Is
    The World Could Be Otherwise: Imagination and the Bodhisattva Path by Norman Fisher.  Shambhala.  207 pp. $17.95. ****1/2 It’s an odd title for a book on Buddhism, which is supposed to devote itself to the world as it is.  When Fischer lectured on the book at the Chapel Hill Zen Center, someone asked him about that, ...
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  • Twelve Years Away, Actually
    Somewhere Toward the End a memoir by Diana Athill.  Norton.  182 pp.  $13.95 The good news about Somewhere Towards the End is that, at the age of 89, Diana Athill still had all her marbles and wrote as well as ever, perhaps better.  Her prose seemed to gain in confidence through the years.  The bad news ...
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  • Relaxing the Frontal Lobe
    The Light That Shines Through Infinity: Zen and the Energy of Life by Dainin Katagiri.  Shambhala.  229 pp.  $16.95. I’ve always thought of Dainin Katagiri as a difficult Zen teacher, partly because I read Returning to Silence when I was new to Zen and found it confounding.  He was a rough contemporary of Shunryu Suzuki, and ...
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