India Books


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India Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

India
Pocket Guide to Meditation
Published in Paperback by Pilgrims Publishing,India (2002-06-01)
Author: Alan L. Pritz
List price:
Used price: $24.25

Average review score:

A must for anyone interested in meditation and spirituality.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1998-11-11
Mr. Pritz has provided a beautiful book for those interested in pursuing their spirituality. His writing is clear and full of insights, based upon years of personal experience. This book is appropriate to those of all religious faiths. This book is a must for all of those wanting to learn more about meditation and how to develop their own personal spiritual practice.

Great Little Resource
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-15
This book provides clear guidance on your path to greater serenity through meditation and spirituality. It provides concise descriptions of spirituality, meditation, stages of soul development, Eight steps towards awakening, specific exercises to start your practice and much more. Definitely a book you should read if you want greater clarity and peace in your life. Highly recommended.

a great resource to begin your meditation journey
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-11-02
A wonderful guide to explore the classical practices of meditation in a very clear and understandable manner.A great resource for the beginner and advanced practioner alike.I would highly recommend this book to anyone who is on the journey to integrate more pause,reflection and spirituality into their life.

What a great Pocket Guide To Meditation!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-10-09
"What a great Pocket Guide To Meditation. This book should be given to everybody who enters a doctor's office, so they hopefully won't need to come back. The HMO's should underwrite this project; it would save them money, which is their bottom line." Larry Dossey

The perfect little book to carry around in purse or pocket .
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-10-09
"Alan has taken a big subject and made it friendly, interesting, and useful for everyone. This is the perfect little book to carry around in purse or pocket for quick moments of inspiration." Lilias Folan, Host of PBS series, Lilias!

India
Princely India: Photographs by Raja Deen Dayal, 1884-1910
Published in Unknown Binding by Knopf (1980)
Author: Deen Dayal
List price: $22.50
Used price: $27.48

Average review score:

AMAZING
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-31
AN AMAZING LOOK AT LIFE CIRCA 1900 IN INDIA. SADLY 50000? GLASS PLATES WERE SOLD AS SCRAP AS THE FAMILY FORTUNE TANKED.
THE PHOTO OF THE TEMPLE AT MOUNT ABU IS AMAZING.


FROM THE DUST JACKET:
These 128 photographs constitute a rare pictorial document that spans twenty-five years. They are the work of Raja Lala Deen Dayal, the outstanding Indian photographer of the 19th century, selected by the Nizam to be the photgrapher to his court.

Through these images we are able to explore the Nizam's courtly life. Here is the Nizam amid his entourage, the Nizam entertaining kings and heads of state at tea, at polo, at hunts, at balls of unsurpassed opulence (the roster of visiting aristocrats included the future Czar of Russia, the archdukes of Austria and Russia, assorted German princelings, and the Duke of Connaught).

Here is the daily life of a princely menage, and here is the Prince himself. And here, in haunting images of Indian landscape and Indian people, seen through the eye of the artist-photographer who was their countryman, is a rare and intimate view of a vanished world."

I WONDER WHAT THE OTHER 40000 TO 60000 PICTURES LOOKED LIKE.

A trip to another world
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-30
(From the DJ flap)

"These 128 photographs constitute a rare pictorial document that spans twenty-five years. They are the work of Raja Lala Deen Dayal, the outstanding Indian photographer of the 19th century, selected by the Nizam to be the photgrapher to his court.

Through these images we are able to explore the Nizam's courtly life. Here is the Nizam amid his entourage, the Nizam entertaining kings and heads of state at tea, at polo, at hunts, at balls of unsurpassed opulence (the roster of visiting aristocrats included the future Czar of Russia, the archdukes of Austria and Russia, assorted German princelings, and the Duke of Connaught).

Here is the daily life of a princely menage, and here is the Prince himself. And here, in haunting images of Indian landscape and Indian people, seen through the eye of the artist-photographer who was their countryman, is a rare and intimate view of a vanished world."

(End quote)

This book is both beautiful and (by today's standards) horrifying at the same time. The incredible pictures in this book are indeed an "intimate view of a vanished world" because they not only chronicle a certain time and place but they also reveal early 20th century man's brutal treatment of other men, of women and children, and especially of animals. (The pictures of the slaughtered and skinned Bengal tigers are not the least bit enjoyable to look at.) Yet at the turn of the 20th century, slaughtering animals, having slaves, and treating women and children like possessions was considered normal, not brutal, behavior.

Sadly, the only societal attitude shown in this book that has NOT changed in the last 100 years is how the rich and the aristocratic (in any country) continue on with their merry, high-living lifestyles while ignoring their fellow countrymen and women who are starving.

An excellent pictorial reference of 19th century India
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 1998-01-21
Princely India is a collection of photographs by one of the pioneer photographers in the world, namely Lala Deen Dayal whose work is a valuable reflection of India in the period 1870-1905. It covers architecture, views, portraits of native princes, visits of dignitaries and influence of the British in various aspects of political and social life. The photographs provide excellent reference material for period costumes, historical events and social life. It is a must for every library and every collector of 19th century photographs. The quality of the pictures is amazingly sharp with an artistic novelty about the composition and lighting coupled with attention to details. Most of the photos particularly views are collodian prints which incorporate the total mastery of the photographer in pioneering circumstances. The book can be an ideal gift for lovers of photography and a fine feast for the coffee table browsers.

Very good pictures of the pre-1948 Hyderabad of the Nizams
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 1997-04-20
The only modern pictorial of pre-1948 Hyderabad of His Exalted Highness the Nizam, once the world's richest man. Good selection of pictures of monuments, people, dresses etc. A "must get" for any serious collector of impressions of the Deccan. Black and white pcitures; subjects covered are famine, palaces, circuses, birthday parties and one photo of Bhilwara temple at Mount Abu that is hard to beat

The best pictorial record of the Nizams State of Hyderabad
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 1997-10-05
Raja Deen Dayal was the most sort after photographer in the state. My parents wedding pictures werewere taken by his studio in 1938. The book is a pictorial history of the state and its people. Some of the most striking photo graphs of the time. Whether the pictures are studio portraits or panaramic view of landscapes. The are very accurateand wonderfully compsed. The light effects in black and whitephotography is phoenominal. Those baby boomers whogrew up in Hyderabad must possess this book. It brings brings the childhood memories of traditionspeople and the landscape back. A totally captivating book.the childhood

India
Punjabi Century, 1857-1947
Published in Paperback by University of California Press (1969-01-01)
Author: Prakash Tandon
List price: $21.95
New price: $8.61
Used price: $1.20

Average review score:

Best book on Indian Culture of the 19th-20th century
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1999-02-17
I first read this book 2 years ago and keep reading it again. Its a book about the Punjab that the British built ("without any hangovers from the Company") but it is also a book of Indian life of that period, and its the *best* such narration. India does not have a deep tradition of such narrations put to paper --not such superb stuff anyways. Earlier I'd read two "sequels" to this book about post-1947 India, and while they're very good, this one is really fascinating. Mr. Tandon *writes* !!

A rare gem
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-26
This book is a rare gem, a mix of Russel Bakers 'Growing Up' and Ahmed Ali's 'Twilight in Delhi'. Prakash Tandon, founder of IIM A, was born in 1911. He traces the history of his family from 1847, about the time the rule of the Sikhs (Sikha Shahi)ended, to 1947. Unlike the rest of India (apart from Hyderabad),Punjab was never ruled by the East India company. When the British took over, many welcomed the change and stability. The Khatris amongst the Punjabis were the first to embrace formal British education. By 1911,as Tandon notes, the engineering services in some districts were managed entirely by Indian staff.

As a child Mr. Tandon grows up in small towns and villages, moving with his father who works as an engineer managing the canal system. He describes a Baisakhi festival on the banks of a river in one such village in photographic detail. Later, he completes his education in a small town called Gujrat, at the foothills of what today would be Pakistani occupied Kashmir. Vividly described, the way of life of this small town, and the ups and downs of Mr. Tandon's family during those years form the core of this book. Pran Nevile attempts a copy of this with his poorly written 'Lahore' but fails to get that emotional touch.

Much of this books success is precisely that- a story of a whole community told through the life of one family with a personal touch. The book ends with the parition and the family's crossing over to India at the wagah border.

A Treasure
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-05-27
Mr. Tandon wrote the book that surprisingly no one ever thought of writing. The book is sort of a biography of a family .. in it he has masterfully woven the whole society around it, though the reader never would realize his till you finish the book. He describes the society, the cultre and traditions from the past with great care love and nostalgia. His command of the subject is complete, I didn't find a single thing he wrote that I had known to be otherwise!!!

a great book
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 1998-12-26
It is one of the best books I have read. The author takes us on a wonderful trip of the punjabi century. A delight to read. A must-read for all punjabis.

A superb account of a Punjabi family in transition.
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 1998-12-26
This is an absolutely superb account of a Punjabi family in transition, during a century of massive change that takes in the fading Mughal Empire in the 19th century and goes through the period of British colonial rule in the 19th and 20th centuries and finally to India's Independence in 1947. This is all seen though the eyes of a family in Punjab, which successfully makes the transition from old traditions to modernity, as seen through the thoughtful eyes of the author, who eventually becomes the first Indian Chairman of a renowned British multinational company in India and finally a leading senior manager in India's public sector. The author was also the first Chairman of the famous Indian Institute of Management in Ahmedabad, set up together with the Harvard Business School and financial support from the Ford Foundation. Written with a verve and a keen and observant eye, it is socio-economic history at its very best. A must read for all Punjabis from India and Pakistan and for all general readers interested in the sub-continent plus all scholars of South Asia..It is a shame that this book it is out of print.The publisher should be encouraged to bring it back into print again!

India
Ring of Fire: An Indonesian Odyssey
Published in Paperback by Park Street Press (1991-11-01)
Author: Lawrence Blair
List price: $24.95
New price: $287.81
Used price: $15.95
Collectible price: $30.00

Average review score:

Ring of Fire: An Indonesian Odyssey
Helpful Votes: 16 out of 16 total.
Review Date: 2003-11-05
British brothers Lawrence and Lorne Blair set out in the 1960s on a marvelous, thought-provoking, ten-year adventure through the 3,000-mile length of the remote Indonesian archipelago. Inspired by a dog-eared copy of Alfred Russell Wallace's The Malay Archipelago -and his nineteenth century voyage of scientific exploration and discovery--their unforgettable odyssey set sail out of the Celebes (Sulawesi) for the Spice Islands on a perilous schooner crossing with the seafaring Bugis. Tossed to and fro from home port Makassar to isolated Aru Island-stalked all the way by rotting ship beams and the specter of pirates-they were rewarded with one of the rarest sights on earth-the fluffy white plumage of the elusive Bird of Paradise.
Metaphysical, anthropological, and intellectual in tone-with a healthy dose of dry wit and humor-the Blairs take you along as they confront komodo dragons, chew betel nut in Sumba, witness a traditional Pasola battle, and herald the annual arrival on shore of the sacred nyale sea worms. Full of naive courage and boundless curiosity, they sought out Asmat headhunters/cannibals in the highlands of Papua New Guinea. Undaunted, these dream wanderers went eye to eye with the fiery blast furnace of simmering Krakatoa. They commandeered a longboat upriver and trekked through the leech-ridden jungles of Borneo with native guides on an arduous land search for the secretive, traditional Punan hunter-gatherers. Ring of Fire chronicles their cultural encounters on Java as they visited the sultan's court (and sacred "kris" knife) and an acupuncturist who harnessed yin/yang energy to heal the sick with self-generated electric charges. Open-minded and non-judgmental about the diverse religions and customs they encountered, the Blairs became deeply enchanted by trance, and by the shadow screen nether world of the wayang kulit. Their travels took them back to Sulawesi for the funeral of the last king of Tanah Torajah-into a unique architectural-animist pocket where boat-shaped roofs rise out of the cool forest floor representing ancestral sky ships on their descent from heaven to earth.
The thrill-seeking, nomadic Blairs unexpectedly found themselves permanently landlocked and suspended-mind, soul, and body-in the island Shangrila that they discovered in Bali. An artist friend in Pengosekan-a vibrantly creative community of farmers and painters-invited them to build a new house on his land. In true, cooperative Balinese style, the brothers had only to pay for the necessary raw materials (bamboo, coconut wood, and elephant grass) and the religious celebration at the completion of the structure. The people of Pengosekan freely contributed their skilled labor and artistic expertise; this shared investment in and commitment to each other's dwellings works to further bind the village together. Sleeping and learning in their open-air platform obervatory perched high above the sculpted jade rice terraces, the Blair brothers came to call Bali their very own, lifelong island of the gods. They would return time and again-in between sometimes dangerous, always enlightening meetings with natural peoples along the equatorial frontier-to their permanent home base in Bali. It is here that they fell in love with one culture and one island out of the hundreds that they visited. Lawrence and Lorne fully explored their adopted pied à terre-from startling footage of the eruption of Mt. Agung in 1963, to the cremation of famous 116-year-old Balinese artist Lempoad, to the opulent funeral procession of the last rajah of Gianyar. (When Lorne died on his beloved Bali in 1996, he was cremated and his remains returned to the sea in accordance with Bali-Hindu religious rites.) Their amazing adventures (available in book or video format) are the stuff of storybook legends-from the hidden rainforest peoples of Borneo, to islands where magicians still hold sway, to the sun-speckled spiritual haven of heart-shaped Bali.

A wonderful adventure that is real and filled with insight.
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 1999-07-21
Goes beyond your usual "travel tale", it is a marvelous adventure and thought provoking regarding the natural peoples of the earth. The chapter on the Dream Wanderers of Borneo will open doors of perception for an alternative world view. The author writes with clarity and quite a lot of humor. The entire book is very personal in its tone and gives the feeling of actually having shared the experience of the amazing journey.

A book close to my heart
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2001-02-11
This book and the companion videos are near and dear to my heart. It kept my dreams of returning to Indonesia alive through a long a crippling illness. Lawrence and Lorne Blair were the adventurers I wanted to be. Openminded, good humored, and willing to try new things. This book kept me good company through some baaaad times. But there is far more to recommend this book than armchair travel lust. The writing is excellent, photography spectacular, and all in all a great story. I highly recommend it to anyone curious about Indonesia. I did finally get to go back and even explore a little. I'm forever grateful to the Blair brothers for this gift of a book!

Wonderful travel and adventure story
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 1999-12-15
An incredibly interesting tale and at times quite deep account of a 10-year joureny through the remotest islands in Indonesia. I wonder if the author is aware of how couragous he and his brother were to go to the places they went and meet such people as cannibals and headhunters and come back to tell the story! Not to mention the more subtle metaphysical comments here and there about the various religions they encountered and all of it presented with a very dry wit.

This book is special.
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-11
I was blown away by this book, as much by how spiritually aware it is and how well it was written. Wow! What an adventure!

India
Secrets of Fat-free Indian Cooking: Over 150 Low-fat and Fat-free Traditional Recipes (Secrets of Fat Free)
Published in Paperback by Avery (1998-05)
Authors: Priya Kulkarni and Anita Ranade
List price: $14.95
Used price: $25.98

Average review score:

Just what we were looking for...
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 1998-06-29
At last : a truly low fat Indian Cookbook !

Varied, tasty, low-fat and Indian. Wow!!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 1998-06-28
The recipes are really tasty. Have already tried a few. Mainly the kids can eat all the stuff we want them to like vegiies and meat without getting too much fat too early in life. The pictures tend to look a bit unreal. Want to know when the authors are doing a sequel with sweet dishes perhaps? Keep it up!

absolutely amazing! a life saver . . .
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-03-11
If you're going insane on a low sodium, low fat diet then get this book!! The recipes are flavorful and rich without the salt and fat of traditional Indian cooking. Some really innovative ways of adding flavor to food (like the fat free coconut milk recipe) had me questioning the recipes but everything I tried has come out absolutely perfect. Thanks so much ladies!!My taste buds are finding a new lease on life!!

Fun to use, great to eat!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 1998-08-06
I hate to cook, but I love Indian food & I love this book... the recipes are short, easy to read, & easy to understand. I like the "Suggested Accompaniments" that come with each recipe, & the dishes really do taste good. The missing fat was not replaced with a lot of sugar ... another plus!

Only book I could find that was low fat and Indian...
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 1998-06-19
Recipes are easy to understand; includes vegetarian and meat; a must if you want to stick to low-fat foods but have an interest in tast ethnic foods.

India
The Shadow of the Great Game
Published in Hardcover by Constable (2006-07-27)
Author: Narendra Singh Sarila
List price:

Average review score:

The genesis of partition and the wages of playing the fear game.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-16
This book by Narendra Singh Sarila is a true eyeopener. Many commonly held beliefs about the history of the Indian subcontinent are disputed and in some cases heartily debunked. The author was the ADC to Mountbatten and thus comes with the imprimatur of "being on the scene".

I remember reading various sources like Wolpert wherein it was emphatically stated that Gandhi was always against partition. Well here Sarila reliably infers that at the end Gandhi thought partition was a necessary evil. Jinnah played the religion card to the hilt appealing to the lower angels of human nature via the fear route. Arguing that muslims would never get a fair shake in a Hindu Congress and nation Jinnah shrewdly played the fear card. Of course thirty million muslims who were not in the demarcated areas were left high and dry.

What is truly sad is the low opinion that Churchill had about Indians in general and Hindus in particular. Yes in those days it was quite common to view Indians as a cacaphony of peoples incapable of governing themselves, but Churchill's animosity seems to have been beyond the bounds of reason. Too bad because Churchill truly was the man of the hour during WW2 and helped save Western civilization. In my eyes the greatness of Churchill is tangibly abased by the vile alloy of racism.

Sarila recounts, in detail, the behind the scenes machinations of various players mostly to the detriment of a united India.

A sad commentary on a lamentable period of the Indian subcontinent. Highly recommended.

Excellent Narrative of India's Partition
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-26
This book is a significant contribution to the understanding of the fateful events surrounding the independence and partition of India and the players involved. The book presents the events in a cogent manner with insightful analyses into the events and personalities. It is a must read for any student of Indian history and politics since it gives insight into the situations affecting the national security and political decisions made even today. We all have heard so much about the "Divide and rule" policy of English. The reader is able to witness that policy in action in this book.

Key features that one learns from this book are: i) the British determination to hold on to India as long as possible, and in the event that this becomes impossible, secure the northwestern portion of India to thwart any real or imagined Russian adventures, ii) The naivety of Indian National Congress leaders, especially Nehru, about the survival of an independent India in a predatory world, iii) the aging of Gandhi and weakening of his faculties and judgment in dealing with the changing political environment, iv) Even though Mountbatten contributed to bringing the princely states into the Union he also did double cross Nehru in dealing with Kashmir, and v) Hunger for power at any cost on the part of Jinnah who died regretting what he had done with his life.

The role that President Roosevelt played in pushing Churchill towards Indian independence and the US gesture to be the first country to send an ambassador to India is neither appreciated nor known among the India's polity nor did the historians pay much attention to the subject. Better management of the relationship with US early on might have paid dividends and the world history could have turned out to be totally different than what we have witnessed.

The author has to be specially commended for his assessment that Indian independence came not because the British had an enlightenment about egalitarianism or human rights but because the empire was economically not tenable any longer, and even more important, the events of the second World War and its conclusion created an environment in India where they could not even count on the loyalty of the Indian army any longer. The "awe" with which the ordinary Indian looked at the Englishman had ended. The bluff that worked for two hundred years stopped working.

Brilliant study of 'divide and rule'
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-05
The author worked from 1948 to 1985 in India's Foreign Service. He uses primary sources in this excellent book to show how from 1906 to 1947 the British state allied with Islamists to defeat India's majority-supported Congress Party.

The Aga Khan and some Bengal landlords founded the Muslim League in 1906 and at once petitioned Viceroy Minto to introduce separate Muslim electorates, a sure way to split a country. Lord and Lady Minto immediately welcomed this: she wrote that it would mean "Nothing less than the pulling back of 62 million people from joining the ranks of the seditious opposition."

Churchill too played the Muslim card, lying that the real problem lay in Hindu-Muslim differences about India's future and not in Britain's rulers' unwillingness to accept Indian independence. Viceroy Linlithgow forged an alliance with Jinnah's Muslim League Party. Linlithgow's successor Lord Wavell produced the 1946 blueprint giving the strategic prize of North-West India to Pakistan.

Jinnah called a `Direct Action Day' for 16 August 1946. The British governor of Bengal knew of the League's intention, yet the British brigadier in charge of law and order in Calcutta ordered his troops confined to barracks for the day. 5,000 people were killed. Wavell's blueprint was implemented when the British withdrew from India in 1947, even though it was kept secret to avoid any impression of a British hand in the division of India.

Sarila summarises, "Once the British realized that the Indian nationalists who would rule India after its independence would deny them military cooperation under a British Commonwealth defence umbrella, they settled for those willing to do so by using religion for the purpose. Their problem could be solved if Mohammed Ali Jinnah, the leader of the Muslim League Party, would succeed in his plan to detach the northwest of India abutting Iran, Afghanistan and Sinkiang and establish a separate state there - Pakistan. The proposition was a realizable one as a working relationship had been established between the British authorities in India and Jinnah during the Second World War and he was willing to cooperate with Britain on defence matters if Pakistan was created."

Imperial policy was and is divide and rule - whether setting Muslim against Hindu in India, Bosnian Muslims against Serbs in Yugoslavia, Sunni against Shia across the Middle East, Protestant against Catholic in Ireland, or Scottish against English in Britain. As Sarila notes, "The successful use by the British to fulfil political and strategic objectives in India was replicated by the Americans in building up the Islamic jihadis in Afghanistan for the same purpose, of keeping the Soviets at bay."

a must-read
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-29
An interesting and detailed analysis based on historical documents that sheds light on the british machinations to encourage, even engineer the partition. lots of other fascinating facts and details are brought to life as well.

An important contribution
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-27
The Partition of India is one of the great un-studied subjects of modern times, especially in light of the great ethnic-cleansing that it caused, it is suprising it is ignored and its refugees forgotten. This book however is not about these crimes but about the politics and also the prejudices that brought about partition. It mostly focuses on the British decision to assist Ali Jinnah and his attempts to form a Muslim state. The British had long supported Muslims in India, both as civil servants and administratively, allowing them to keep Shariah law while suppressing Hindu traditions.

As the Great Game ended in 1905 and world politics changed the British continued to cultivate loyal Muslims in India and used them to split India, eventually using them to create Pakistan, and using Pakistan against Soviet Russia, which would have reverberations in the 1980s and even today.

This is a very interesting and new point of view. Few authors have tackled the subject of British pro-Islamic politics in their colonies and this is an important contribution.

Seth J. Frantzman

India
That's How It Was
Published in Hardcover by Sheriar Pr (1995-10-16)
Author: Eruch Jessawala
List price: $25.00
Used price: $7.00

Average review score:

Eruch gives wonderful insight into life with Baba
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-08
Eruch tells Baba stories in a way that makes you feel like you were there. Eruch talks about his personal experiences from living with Baba. If you love Baba stories this is the book. I have many Baba books but this is one of my favorites. I also recommend Ivy Duce book on How a Master works also has good Baba stories.

Eruch gives wonderful insight into life with Baba
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-08
Eruch tells Baba stories in a way that makes you feel like you were there. Eruch talks about his personal experiences from living with Baba. If you love Baba stories this is the book. I have many Baba books but this is one of my favorites. I also recommend Ivy Duce book on How a Master Works. It also is well written with good Baba stories.

I learned a lot
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-08
I had been wondering on my journey for about 1 1/2 years and did not understand why certain things were happening to me. I knew there was a purpose but I did not know what it was. I had read Meher Baba's "Discourses" and it helped me but not enough. Then I read Eruch's book and I could relate to almost every story he told; it was almost like a veil of ignorance about these matters being lifted and gaining new insights into what had been dark areas before. Thanks, Eruch for writing this book. Another book which I read subsequently was Meher Baba's "God Speaks". This is a book difficult to read but perseverance pays off handsomely in the end. God Speaks was a milestone steeping stone for me in getting a glimpse of what the path to God Realization is about.

Coolest book! A Saturday With the Mandali!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-02-28
This is a cool book. It has a lot of stories about Meher Baba which can greatly inspire you. Eruch Jessawala is one of the best storytellers I've ever come across. Reading these stories is like sitting in Meherabad on a saturday morning. Spectacular.
Jai Baba!

My brother, my teacher, my friend
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-19
I considered Eruch my teacher. I had a lot of personal contact with him off and on over a twenty year period. And many of these wonderful stories I heard him tell personally, and often he might tell these stories a little differently depending on who was near to him that day. That is, I found Eruch to be a unique, royal gentlemen around women and children, and with a wordly one like me, he could charm and enchant and surprize on all levels, as the perfect teacher should be able to do.

Eruch most help me deepen my faith in God to where I began to experience God was a absolute certainty. And to an -- at times as I was -- agnostic, this was a remarkably welcomed, magnificent process.

I was able to walk, often just he and I, literally hundreds of miles with Eruch in the early morning (over a period of 10 years), in the beautiful countryside of Western India, near Meherazad where he had lived with Meher Baba for most of his life. And he was a tremendous ingredient with my Hafiz work; I would say he was the impetus behind it and many poems he directly helped me with, even offering very specific word changes at times. And this man was the person who had the most physical contact with Meher Baba of anyone on earth; he most often spoke for Baba as Meher Baba had been silent the last 40 years of His life. And Baba very directly says of Himself: He is the Christ, the Buddha, the Prophet come again. What is one to do when faced with such an EXTRAORDINARY claim?

This book would help any, tremendously, in chipping away at such a claim, if they have an interest to do so. I have been exploring that "claim" myself, now, for over 30 years. And one of the still evolving conclusions I have come up with is this: I do believe in God, a God of Infinite Power, and thus a God who could easily appear on this planet as Mohammad, Krishna, Buddha and Jesus -- as the Avatar, that is, as the descent of God in human form. And as to if Meher Baba is that -- God in human form: Well... I feel that history over the millenniums votes in their Prophets, their Buddhas, their Christs, their Rams, their Krishnas -- by some sacred means that takes place in the most discerning (intuitive as it may be for most) regions of the heart and soul. How could I really cast an objective vote about this after investing a big part of my life in the search for Truth that so entwined me with Meher Bada and many of His close disciples. Is Meher Baba the embodiment of the Divine - "The Being of all beings," the Root of all consciousness and space and form?

My vote is: Yep. I think the Big -- Gigantic -- Bang happened again on earth.

Daniel Ladinsky
Bestselling Penguin author of the anthololy: "Love Poems from God", and "The Gift: Poems by Hafiz."

India
Trekking in the Annapurna Region (Nepal Trekking Guide)
Published in Paperback by Trailblazer Publications (1996-06)
Author: Bryn Thomas
List price: $14.95
Used price: $8.55

Average review score:

A Wonderful Guide!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-14
I bought this fantastic little guide in a bookstore in Kathmandu. I used it during my trek around Annapurna and I cannot recommend it highly enough. Much better than the LP guide, and small enough that it doesn't get in the way.

The Best!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-14
This is definitely the best guidebook to carry while trekking in the Annapurna region: loads of maps with most of the teahouses labeled, accurate times for both directions, interesting cultural information, small so as to make it more portable, and fairly up to date. I used it in November 2007, so there are some changes as one would expect, but still is excellent. Highly recommend!

Detailed information with excellent maps
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 1998-07-19
I found the information in the book was great help. The maps together with the estimated timings were particularly helpful in deciding the route to take.

In addition to the treks Bryn Thomas also gives useful information on places to stay.

We used the book when treking from Jomsom to Pokhara and it was invaluable.

Bryn Rocks!
Helpful Votes: 19 out of 19 total.
Review Date: 1999-12-09
This guide is all you need for the Annapurna. Beats the pants off Lonely Planet. Great maps, highlights, places to stay, etc.; small and lightweight; good gear list for preparing, info on when to go; bits on Kathmandu and Pokhara. We hiked the entire circuit and used Bryn several times each day.

Fabulous book!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-31
I did the Annapurna Circuit trek (Around Annapurna) last September with this book. I was my bible.
The book has very good chapters about Nepal in general, Kathmandu and Pokhara but it's strength lies in the trail maps and text.
The maps are very very detailed (you can't get lost...), they indicate where is the next steep climbing and how much time does it takes to the next village. In the text you can find recommendations for eating and lodging (that never miss...).
The book covers all the popular treks in the Annapurna region but also offer side treks for more adventrous trekkers.

The bottom line : Worth every Penny!

India
Uncommon Answers to Common Questions
Published in Hardcover by Life Bliss Foundation (Nithyananda Pub.) (2004)
Author: Nithyananda
List price:
New price: $17.99
Used price: $12.00

Average review score:

Common questions - Brilliant answers
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-25
Nithyananda has done it again in this book. Great answers from the word go. Never need to buy any other book if you have any questions related to our everyday life.

Answers to all the questions that most folks look for in the spiritual path
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-24
I have read Uncommon Answers To Common Questions. The book is written in a question and answer format. Paramahamsa Nithyananda lucidly answers questions posed by devotees who have started their spiritual journey. He provides candid answers to common questions in a modern context. A must read for those interested in answers to common questions that hold us from starting our journey of personal transformation.

Great Book to Start With
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-23
Much like "Open the door and let the breeze in!", this book is a great place to start for those on a spiritual path or just wanting to know more about Sri Nithyananda. There's a lot of information that is easy to read.

A treasure trove of wisdom for our everyday life
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-25
The cover of the book - the title and the photograph of Sri Nithyananda - was what attracted me to the book.

I started browsing it and was soon immersed.

I found that many of my questions are answered here in a simple and lucid style. The issues covered are those that are faced by every one of us - ranging from relationships to our quest for happiness.

The simplicity in the style, the lucid explanations, the stories and examples, belie the deep wisdom and insight behind many of these answers. Many of these answers provide a new perspective, a clearer way of looking at the same problem. I can say that some of these answers really shook me up - 'Why didnt I think of that before?'

I had read that just the very words of an Enlightened Master can cut through our doubts and liberate us of our mental conditionings. This book made it an experience for me.

This book is a tremendous tool for anyone - whether a spiritual seeker or otherwise - just because it addresses our need to be joyful here and now, whatever we do in our lives.

This book will start you on your journey of personal transformation. Good luck!

Fantastic buy
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-24
I was very apprehensive when I bought this book, honestly ! But the title seemed inviting and I thought...hey what the heck..its just 18 bucks.

The books is every penny spent. I did not realize that such simple concepts can actually transform one so easily. Well, its a journey of smiles and tears that one goes through and the book shows how easily one can just witness the whole drama and not drown in our self made troubles of emotions.

Nithyananda has an excellent way of describing things. I am simply amazed at his style of simplicity.

If you want to start reading something that would bring a smile on your face and feel "ah... so simple, let me try implementing this...", this is the book not to be missed.

India
The Vision of Buddhism: The Space Under the Tree
Published in Paperback by Paragon House Publishers (1990-01)
Author: Roger J. Corless
List price: $16.95
New price: $12.87
Used price: $1.20
Collectible price: $16.95

Average review score:

Excellent introductory to Buddhism
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-11
This book is a great source for anyone interested in Buddhism. The chapters are well organized and all terminology is explained thoroughly. The author is great about using examples that everyone can comprehend without going off on tangents that detract from the material.

This is a very accessible summary of Buddhist thought.
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 1998-05-01
In this excellent and very readable book, Dr. Corless (a professor of religion at Duke University) uses the life of the Buddha as a framework for introducing the major concepts of Buddhism to a general readership. He accurately and concisely covers the major ideas of South, Central ane East Asian Buddhism and shows a fine respect for all of them. Zen, Theravadin Buddhism, Chinese Pure Land and Tibetan Vajrayana are all well represented and put into perspective. Despite its broad scope, this is an easy to read and inspiring, as well as informative, book. The author has mastered the art of speaking to those of us who are neither scholars nor specialists. "The Vision of Buddhism" does not go over our heads, and Dr. Corless never talks down to us. I highly recommend it.

the best intro book to buddhism
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-20
I bought this book after I met Prof. Corless in an United Religion Initiative conference. He's a very witty guy with a sharp observation. This book demonstrates these qualities.

This book is amazingly comprehensive yet easy to read. I was glued to the book right after I received it. Prof. Corless structures and explaines complex Buddhist ideas in an easy and fascinating way. Definitely one of the best introduction to Buddhism because, very early in the book, he points out common mistakes Westerners make when approaching Buddhism. Since most people are influenced by mainstream Christianity, they analyze Buddhism with the wrong methodology.

Along reading the book, you will pickup small funny stories from him. His personality shines through this book.

The other reviews are dead on
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-02-25
This book is indeed one of the best introductions to Buddhism one can possibly read. Corless applies his own experience with the religion, to all of the teachings he presents in the book. Keep in mind that a lot of what is included here is explanations of the Buddhist idealogy, not anything that you can really practice.

Use this book as more of a factor in deciding if Buddhism is the right religion for you. Corless even takes the time to write some excellent footnotes, so you could even consider this book for research.

I think the reason this book worked so well for me was the fact that it was presented in such a non-threatening way that it makes the book easy to absorb. Keep in mind that careful reading is important, as a lot of chapters reference previous chapters. This is not a determent to the quality of the book, rather it is important to the building block style of teaching Buddhism that the book represents.

Buy this book as a great introduction if you have even the slightest interest in the Buddhist vision. You won't be disappointed.

Excellent introduction to spirited buddhism
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 1997-02-16
I've probably read 1000 books on buddhism, and Corless' book still gave me new insights and new ways of looking at the Dharma. *THE* book I recommed to friends who ask "How can I learn something about Buddhism."


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