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Amazon Associate

If you see books or music or tools on this site that you would like to buy through Amazon, click here and thus i have seen will get a small percentage of the purchase price of the item. Thank you. 

The Elements of Typographic Style

Patagonia Synchilla Snap-T Pullover

Minding the Earth, Mending the Word: Zen and the Art of Planetary Crisis

North Face Base Camp Duffel (Medium)

 

 

 

Entries from January 1, 2014 - January 31, 2014

Friday
Jan032014

Books II

Have just started to read for the second (third?) time George Crane's beautiful Bones of the Master: A Journey to Secret Mongolla. From the inside flap:

In 1959 a young Ch'an monk named Tsung Tsai (shown above) escapes the Red Army troops that destroy his monastery, and flees alone three thousand miles across a China swept by chaos and famine. Knowing his fellow monks are dead, himself starving and hunted, he is sustained by his mission: to carry on the teachings of his Buddhist meditation master, who was too old to leave with his disciple.

Nearly forty years later, Tsung Tsai persuades his neighbor in Woodstock, NY, maverick poet George Crane, to travel with him back to his birthplace at the edge of the Gobi Desert, find his master's grave, and plant the seeds of a spiritual renewal in China.

This book is a jewel.

[NOTE: Originally posted August 15, 2013].

 

Thursday
Jan022014

Books

After I signed up for the Amazon Associate program, I wrote in the sidebar "If you see books or music or tools on this site that you would like to buy through Amazon, click here and thus i have seen will get a small percentage of the purchase price of the item". And then I thought, how frequently do I really talk about books or music or tools on this site? So, to satisfy my curiosity - and provide a sample of some of the items that I have featured here over the years, for the next couple of days I will be rummaging through the archive for book and music and tool posts. Please bear with me. You might see something you like.

Certainly not an easy read, but Mark Elvin's The Retreat of the Elephant is an amazing compendium. The book provides an overview of 4,000 years of environmental history in China, and clearly shows that the ruling powers in China have been interacting with nature - on a huge scale and with mixed results - for a long, long time. Four thousand years ago, there were elephants throughout most of the area that what would later become China. Today, wild elephants are found only in small part of Yunnan province in the extreme southwest of the country. According to Elvin, "this pattern is the result of a protracted war with human beings which the elephants lost".

Once you start reading this book it is hard to put down. Especially if you work in China. It talks about humans, and elephants, and deforestation, and mountains and rivers, and ethnic marginalization, and Chinese colonialism, and the rise of Buddhism, and, perhaps most importantly, how all of these things fit together. I highly recommend this book. Am posting on it now because I just finished reading it - for the second time (thx, Jeff). [NOTE: Image is Fan Yi, Zhong Kui Riding an Elephant, Yale University Art Gallery].

 

Wednesday
Jan012014

1.1.14

Always try to start the new year off with a smile. Like I did here and here and here. Image above shows some of the kids in Tikon (see Faces of Tikon); note the thanaka paste (see Thanaka) smeared on their faces. I am grateful for the exciting potential of a new year once again. May all beings be happy.
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