Books in Brief
To A Mountain in Tibet By Colin Thubron Harper 2011; 240 pp., $24.99 (cloth) According
to folklore, Mount Kailas flew to Tibet from an unknown country, and
before the celestial gods could return it, the Buddha nailed it down
with his footprints. To a Mountain in Tibet
is the celebrated travel writer Colin Thubron’s account of his
pilgrimage to the holy Mount Kailas. It’s also an account of his grief.
“Sometimes journeys begin long before their first step is taken,” he
says. But this journey began not long ago, in a hospital ward as the
last of his family died. The book’s two threads—modern Tibetan culture
and mourning—work well together, because Thubron delves deeply into his
take on Tibetan beliefs and customs regarding death and dying. As always
with Thubron, the prose is rich and polished.
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The Poet's Way By Manjusvara Windhorse Publications 2011; 160 pp., $12.95 (paper) Haiku Before Haiku: From the Renga Masters to Basho Translated by Steven D. Carter Columbia University Press 2011; 176 pp., $69.50 (cloth) Yoga Heart: Lines on the Six Perfections By Leza Lowitz Stone Bridge Press 2011; 112 pp., $12.95 (paper) Here are three new treasures for poetry lovers. The Poet’s Way
is a step-by-step guide to writing poems that lays down poetic
techniques and theories, and includes exercises, a rich selection of
examples, and engaging anecdotes. The author is Manjusvara (David
Keefe), who leads writing workshops in Buddhist centers around the world
and teaches that writing can be a spiritual practice that helps us
better understand our lives. Haiku Before Haiku
begins with Steven D. Carter explaining that, though the mention of
haiku may make many of us think of Basho, haiku—in an earlier
incarnation—was already 500 years old when Basho composed his poems.
Carter goes on to detail the evolution of haiku and then offer his
translations of a delightful selection. Yoga Heart, by yoga teacher and Shambhala Sun
contributor Leza Lowitz, is a book of original poems. It’s divided into
six sections, each containing ten poems and focusing on a different paramita, or transcendent perfection. “Practice the six perfections to perfection,” she writes. “Then lavishly pass them on.”
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The Buddha in the Classroom: Zen Wisdom to Inspire Teachers By Donna Quesada Skyhorse Publishing 2011; 224 pp., $12.95 (paper) After
twelve years of teaching, Donna Quesada understood something she’d
never realized as a kid at school: sometimes teachers want the three
o’clock bell to ring even more than their students do. The Buddha in the Classroom
is the story of Quesada’s journey from burnout to a rekindled passion
for her profession, and the critical role that her longtime Zen practice
played in that transformation. Each chapter unpacks her experience of a
common classroom challenge, such as tardiness, cheating, and disruptive
behavior, accompanied by a relevant dharma teaching. Since Quesada is a
professor specializing in Asian philosophy at Santa Monica College in
California, her anecdotes are about teaching at the college level.
Nonetheless, the meat of what she says is applicable even for
kindergarten teachers.
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The Next Eco-Warriors: 22 Young Women and Men Who Are Saving the Planet Edited by Emily Hunter Conari Press 2011; 262 pp., $19.95 (paper) Twenty-two
environmental activists, all under the age of forty, tell their
stories. These young people, who hail from across the globe, are using
every imaginable tactic to make a difference. For example, Tanya Fields,
an African American woman, is fighting poverty through guerilla farming
in New York City; Rob Stewart, a Canadian filmmaker, is shining a light
on the shark-finning industry through his film Sharkwater;
and Australian model Hannah Fraser is performing in a mermaid costume
to educate people on the importance of marine life. Emily Hunter, the
editor of The Next Eco-Warriors,
is the daughter of Greenpeace’s founding president and is herself an
environmental activist. Her work has included trips to Antarctica to
help save whales and the Galapagos Islands, where she was held hostage
when she tried to stop poaching. Currently, Hunter produces and hosts TV
documentaries about environmental issues.
Exiles By Cary Groner Spiegel & Grau 2011; 288 pp., $25 (cloth) Exiles
begins dramatically, slamming readers into the action. In chapter 1 we
meet Peter Scanlon, an American doctor, and Alex, his teenage daughter,
caught in the crosshairs of a civil war. They’re in Nepal, hiding in a
cold, dark hut. Alex is feverish, squatting miserably over a bucket, and
Peter is shrugging off the discomfort of his foot. He doesn’t expect to
need that foot anyway, not come sunrise. Peter came to Kathmandu to
volunteer at a health clinic, but—it seems—he’d sorely misjudged the
dangers involved. Author Cary Groner has studied meditation and Tibetan
Buddhism with Chagdud Tulku Rinpoche for more than fifteen years, and
he’s woven the thread of Buddhist philosophy into this fast-paced novel.
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