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Review Two Shores of Zen: An American Monk's Japan

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Dec. 14, 2009 By abbywords
This funny, candid and warm-hearted first book by Rutschman-Byler is a cult-classic in the making. His autobiographical adventures in Zen at Tassajara Zen Mountain Center and the fictionalized “Gendoji” Monastery in Japan lead the reader on a hilarious romp through spiritual longing, human folly, and a transformative coming of age. No detail is spared, especially the author’s struggles, triumphs, and shortcomings. With fearlessness and wit, this Gen-Y author invites a much-needed dialog about the past, present and future of Buddhism in the West. No other book at the time of this review offers such a youthful and spirited sentiment.
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Dec. 14, 2009 By hondodave
I'm so happy to finally see this book come out. Various drafts have been passed around pockets of the American Zen community for the last few years, and now Jiryu has finally put out this "incomplete but final draft for the wide Sangha." It's a moving, wise, and laugh-out-loud funny narrative of a young, idealistic American Buddhist monk training in Japan. The tales of cultural misunderstanding are worth reading--funny and insightful--and the narrator's slow growth is surprisingly affecting. More than anything else, though, this book is inspiring in its portrait of a heart--a raw, clumsy, messy, beautiful heart-- given totally to bodhisattva practice. Five stars!

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Product Details

ISBN 978-0-557-16821-7
Copyright Jiryu Mark Rutschman-Byler (Standard Copyright License)
Published January 9, 2010
Language English
Pages 194
 
Binding Perfect-bound Paperback
Interior Ink Black & white
Dimensions (inches) 6.0 wide × 9.0 tall

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