Book of Serenity: One Hundred Zen Dialogues
E**.
Excellent translation
A good translation of a classic Zen work. I have practice Zen for nearly 30 years and love reading dialogues. It forces me to use my brain thinking about something other than what is one television.
E**A
Five Stars
wonderful product thank you !
A**R
A treasure
This overlooked, and not readily available, classic of Zen and Buddhism in gerneral is a great tool for practitioners of the Way. These ancient "Zen Dialogues" continue to serve as a guide to enlightenment, just as the old masters intended. It is important to recognize, that although "ancient" in historical terms, these "dialogues" are highly practical and useful even today in our very different age and society--and a great testament to the great teaching talent that defines an "ancient master." Another great feature of this "Book of Serenity" is the sheer enjoyability as literature and sublime poetic beauty.
S**E
Five Stars
Love this thank you.
A**R
Four Stars
Recommend reading the foreword for perspective and background. Nicely presented though.
J**F
I don't get them
I may not have the background to understand this book or it is hard to understand. Probably a little of both. This rating reflects the value I think it will hold for layman, not the book's quality. People with a deep dharma practice may find it more valuable.
A**R
Five Stars
Great book, good value.
L**E
Master Fa-yen Points to a Blind
I bought this book long ago and Amazon's systems keep pestering me to review it, although I haven't read it properly. I had previously bought the "Blue Cliff Record", and unless you can devote your whole day to koan study, that by itself will see you out of this world. Buying this as well was like the man who wins a lifetime's supply of free beer and is so excited he goes out and buys a second lifetime's supply.But who can resist endless computer nagging? Besides, the reviewer below, who seemed to like the book in so far as you can tell, yet only gave it one star, has skewed the ratings. (He gets "wandering in samara" confused with "Appointment in Samsara", so maybe he was just ignoring the Precept about Not Using Intoxicants.)These hundred "cases" were collected by Master Hung-chih; the prose commentaries were added by Master Wan-sung Hsing-hsiu, playing the role that Master Yüan-wu did in the "Blue Cliff Record". Thomas Cleary's Introduction is a useful brief history of Zen. "Serenity" isn't quite the word: "The Book of Equanimity" says it exactly. Equanimity is a deep perception of Oneness, or of the Indescribable beyond even Oneness: if you realise it with heart, soul and body, you know that water can't drown you, that fire can't burn you.So what is a Koan? An IQ puzzle? A logical enigma that enables you to see the limits of rational thought? A mysterious aphorism that you should just Be With, not try to solve? Heck no! A Koan Is A Plain, Clear Statement About Something You Are Quite Capable Of Understanding. Laughter is the usual response when you see into a koan ("solve" is misleading.) I'm not entirely sure what's so funny. Partly it's that it was all so obvious: something insanely wonderful was right there in front of you all the time.Koan-study is easy. All you have to do is give up all interest in everything else, abandon all plans for the future and throw away your body and life itself. No-one can help you: you have to see for yourself. Pick a koan from the "Mumonkan", the "beginners" koan collection, pick one that intrigues and puzzles you.Do you feel utterly, hopelessly baffled? You can't figure out even how to begin thinking about it? You can't see how anyone could solve it, how there could possibly be a solution? When you try to think about it, you feel as if your head has been wrapped in several layers of cling-film? Great! You're on the right track already. Pretend that somebody inside you understands perfectly. If you try to think it out for yourself, he or she will fold his or her arms and say, "Fine, you can do without me." But if you feel thoroughly baffled, so lost in bafflement that you can hardly recognise your own name or words like "soap-dish" or "pillow-case", he or she will say, "Oh, you need my help. Sure. Watch this."
A**I
Three Stars
difficult - not as accessible as the blue cliff record
P**E
Koans
The material is covered in detail in Thomas Cleary's Classic series. Useful for advanced practitioners.The tales (koans) are useful for bringing insight to different psychological states.
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