Wow. Beautiful. Horrific. Inspiring.
Reviews and Comments
Slow reader. Picky reader. Categories include: History of Religions, Spirituality, Fantasy and Science Fiction, Historical Fiction. For example, Neil Gaiman, but not Terry Pratchett (I do love Good Omens); have never read Lord of the Rings all the way through; Lovecraft, but not Stephen King. Other authors I tend to enjoy: Neil Stephenson, Jeanette Winterson, Richard Powers, and I'm running out of time this evening, so come back later ;-)
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EclecticWanderer rated King, warrior, magician, lover: 4 stars
EclecticWanderer rated The return of the prodigal son: 4 stars
EclecticWanderer rated The book of mu: 4 stars
EclecticWanderer rated Ragnarok: 3 stars
Ragnarok by A. S. Byatt (Ill)
EclecticWanderer reviewed Habibi by Craig Thompson
EclecticWanderer rated Be the person you want to find: 4 stars
EclecticWanderer rated J.R.R. Tolkien: 5 stars
EclecticWanderer reviewed A heart blown open by Keith Martin-Smith
Review of 'A heart blown open' on 'Goodreads'
4 stars
We are the sum of our experiences, and some of us have had more experiences than others! Jun Po Dennis Kelly’s is one such soul. A difficult upbringing and an interesting set of counter-culture career choices provide much of the context for the first half of the book. Throughout all of this, however, is his quest to reconnect with a mystical experience (my words) that he had as a child. I particularly enjoyed the second half of the book -- so much so that I changed my rating from 3 to 4 stars -- where Jun Po travels to India twice, becomes involved with Zen Buddhism, and eventually becomes a abbot and lineage holder of a Rinzai Zen tradition. There are entertaining stories of meeting eccentric spiritual leaders, and several profound recollections of transcendent experiences by Jun Po. The end of the book talks about the development of his Mondo …
We are the sum of our experiences, and some of us have had more experiences than others! Jun Po Dennis Kelly’s is one such soul. A difficult upbringing and an interesting set of counter-culture career choices provide much of the context for the first half of the book. Throughout all of this, however, is his quest to reconnect with a mystical experience (my words) that he had as a child. I particularly enjoyed the second half of the book -- so much so that I changed my rating from 3 to 4 stars -- where Jun Po travels to India twice, becomes involved with Zen Buddhism, and eventually becomes a abbot and lineage holder of a Rinzai Zen tradition. There are entertaining stories of meeting eccentric spiritual leaders, and several profound recollections of transcendent experiences by Jun Po. The end of the book talks about the development of his Mondo Zen Hollow Bones order as a way to accelerate awakening.
Review of 'Twelve Steps to a Compassionate Life' on 'Goodreads'
5 stars
This book provides a survey of compassion through the lenses of Daoism, Buddhism, Judaism, Christianity, and Islam while offering twelve concrete and challenging steps to ground us in the spiritual practice of compassion. These steps are anchored in the Buddha's meditation on the four immeasurable minds of love, and each step either builds upon this meditation or offers complimentary exercises to strengthen your practice.
Compassion is a skill that we need to practice in order to achieve fitness in its usage. Without this fitness, when passions are inflamed and we are experiencing feelings of aggravation, frustration, or hatred, then we will find it impossible to respond from compassion and instead follow the primal urgings of our habits and instincts.
I particularly enjoyed the use of stories from all of the above traditions as well as Greek myth and Socrates' method of dialog to illustrate various points and to show a …
This book provides a survey of compassion through the lenses of Daoism, Buddhism, Judaism, Christianity, and Islam while offering twelve concrete and challenging steps to ground us in the spiritual practice of compassion. These steps are anchored in the Buddha's meditation on the four immeasurable minds of love, and each step either builds upon this meditation or offers complimentary exercises to strengthen your practice.
Compassion is a skill that we need to practice in order to achieve fitness in its usage. Without this fitness, when passions are inflamed and we are experiencing feelings of aggravation, frustration, or hatred, then we will find it impossible to respond from compassion and instead follow the primal urgings of our habits and instincts.
I particularly enjoyed the use of stories from all of the above traditions as well as Greek myth and Socrates' method of dialog to illustrate various points and to show a unified respect for this thread that runs through us all.
EclecticWanderer rated The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo: 5 stars
The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo by Stieg Larsson (Millennium, #1)
The Industrialist: Henrik Vanger, head of the dynastic Vanger Corp. is tormented by the loss of a child decades earlier …
EclecticWanderer rated The Tao of Pooh (The Wisdom of Pooh): 5 stars
The Tao of Pooh (The Wisdom of Pooh) by Benjamin Hoff
The Tao of Pooh is a book written by Benjamin Hoff. The book is intended as an introduction to the …
EclecticWanderer rated Neverwhere: 4 stars
Neverwhere by Neil Gaiman, Full Cast, Anthony Head, and 7 others
"Richard Mayhew is an ordinary young man with an ordinary life and a good heart. His world is changed forever …
EclecticWanderer rated Good Omens: 5 stars
Good Omens by Neil Gaiman, Terry Pratchett
Armageddon only happens once, you know. They don't let you go around again until you get it right.
According to …
EclecticWanderer rated Fight Club: 4 stars
Fight Club by Chuck Palahniuk
Fight Club is a 1996 novel by Chuck Palahniuk. It follows the experiences of an unnamed protagonist struggling with insomnia. …