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Friday
Jun072013

Best Buddhist Books for Summer 2013, Part One

 

By Michael Sheehy, Review Editor, Buddhadharma

Looking for a great Buddhist book to dive into this summer? Here is Buddhadharma’s selection of the Best Buddhist Books of the year so far. These are books that will expand and deepen your understanding of Buddhism to help you navigate the waters of samsara.

As is our formula, we have selected books based on the criteria that they inform Buddhists about their practice, advance our understanding of the Buddhist traditions, and are written or translated to be accessible. These are the books that you’ll want to take with you on a long weekend, while you travel, sit on a beach, or find time in a retreat setting.

 

From Stone to Flesh: A Brief History of the Buddha
Donald Lopez
The University of Chicago Press

So you think you know who the Buddha was. Did you know that he was an Egyptian priest exiled from his north African kingdom during a Persian invasion twenty-three hundred years ago? This, among other fascinating narratives from eighteenth and nineteenth century European scholars, missionaries, and explorers of Buddhist Asia, contribute to the Western conception of the Buddha and Buddhism. Lopez traces the shift toward our present-day understanding of the Buddha, arguing that our modern view of the Buddha as a historical figure who lived in India and founded a world religion was “born in Paris in 1844.” However much a fascinating read, this is not a history of Buddhism per se, but rather a synopsis of European ideas and images of the Buddha that have come to shape how we understand the Buddha today.         

*See the feature review in the Summer 2013 issue of Buddhadharma.

 

Essential Dogen
Edited by Kazuaki Tanahashi and Peter Levitt
Shambhala Publications

Few Buddhist masters are beloved by Western Buddhists like Eihei Dogen (1200-1253), founder of the Japanese Soto school of Zen. With this new collection of his works, we now have a single book in which to access samples of this Zen master’s thought and expression. The book is a compilation of selected writings from the enormous body of Dogen’s collected works including his writings on poetry, dialogues, and great elucidations on meditation. Though this is in no way a substitute for Dogen’s primary writings including his masterpiece, Treasury of the True Dharma Eye (Shobo Genzo), because the teachings are divided into snippets and vignettes, it makes for a great handbook to study Dogen’s essential points.

 

The Four Dharma of Gampopa
Traleg Kyabgon
KTD Publications

The Four Dharmas are pith instructions that are understood to comprise the whole of the Buddhist path of spiritual transformation. Set down by the twelfth-century Kagyu master and disciple of the famed yogin Milarepa, Gampopa Sonam Rinchen (1079-1153), these teachings are cherished within the Tibetan tradition. Brought to life with the commentary in this book by Traleg Rinpoche (1955-2012), we see how one’s vision of the dharma increases in depth as progress is made along the path of meditation. As taught by Gampopa, these Four Dharmas guide the practitioner from turning the mind towards dharma teachings, to succeeding along the path, to clarifying confusion to the pinnacle point when confusion dawns as wisdom.


This is the first post in a five part series. Stay-tuned through the summer.

Click here to browse all of our previous online reviews.

Tuesday
May212013

True Blessings

In this commentary on a traditional Guru Rinpoche visualization, the contemporary Dzogchen master Tulku Thondup Rinpoche reveals the deep nontheistic essence of Vajrayana practice. We receive the true blessings of the enlightened ones when our mind and theirs become one.

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Tuesday
May212013

A Straight Road with Many Curves 

Gregory Shepherd looks back on his Zen training in Japan with the late Yamada Roshi and the difficult lessons he learned.

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Tuesday
May212013

The Practical Practitioner

If you want to get anywhere with your practice, says Anyen Rinpoche, it must be built on intellectual and experiential certainty.

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Tuesday
May212013

Forum: Your Meditation Reality Check 

Ezra Bayda, Judith Simmer-Brown, and Kamala Masters discuss how to identify obstacles in your practice, apply antidotes that work, and deepen your meditation in the process.

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Tuesday
May212013

Awaken with Them? Really?

Zen priest and professional facilitator catherine toldi examines the painful conflicts that can arise in sanghas and offers practical advice on how to deal with them.

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Tuesday
May212013

Unlimited Heart

After caring for his ailing mother for nine years, Ajahn Viradhammo reflects on self-sacrifice and the importance of cultivating a strong and expansive heart.

One thing that comes up a lot for me is the limitation of personal­ity. There’s something about it that doesn’t change very much.

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Tuesday
May212013

Walking the Talk

by Andrew Olendzki

In classical Buddhist teaching, meditation (samadhi) has always been sandwiched between integrity (sila) on the one hand and wisdom (pañña) on the other. Indeed, this is what makes it Buddhist. As a technol­ogy for the attenuation of consciousness, meditation had been practiced by yogis for centuries before the Buddha, but in his hands it became a tool for the deep transformation of character that results in liberation of the mind from the toxins that cause suffering.

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Monday
May202013

Ask the Teachers

My teacher died twenty-two years ago. Since then I have maintained my connection to the sangha and still practice in the Tibetan Buddhist tradition. But that’s only two of the three jewels. Am I doing myself and the tradition a disservice by trying to practice Buddhism without a guru? Would I be better off opting for another practice—perhaps secular mindfulness—that I can do without a teacher?

Zenkei Blanche Hartman:Certainly I think practicing the Buddha Way without a teacher is better than not practicing at all. However, you have not said anything about why you want to practice without a teacher. Do you live in a location where there are no teachers available? Does it feel somehow disloyal to your original teacher for you to work with a new teacher? Have you asked this question of your deceased teacher in your heart during meditation?

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Monday
May202013

A Family Affair 

Sumi Loundon Kim presents a new model for family-centered dharma communities.

Ed Gensho Welsh, a longtime member of the Zen Community of Oregon, posted the fol­lowing on BuddhistGeeks.com:

In the USA, many couples start attending church after having a baby. And most churches have the resources to support them. In American Buddhism, the pattern appears to be the opposite: have a baby  and disappear. But then, do most sanghas offer the support that churches do? The answer to Ed’s question is no—most Buddhist communities whose membership consists primarily of American Buddhist converts have not created ongoing ways for the whole family to participate.

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