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

India
How to Master Change in Your Life
Published in Hardcover by New Age Books,India (2001-12)
Author: Mary Carroll Moore
List price:
New price: $67.98
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Average review score:

Excellent resource for anyone going through a change in Life
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-10
I have read this book through cover to cover, it is very well written, and practical. It gives excellent information, useful tips, and techniques. It is part of my permanent library and an invaluable resource. It will not disappoint you nor leave you wanting more. It's an outstanding read and I commend the author. I could not recommend it more highly! Great job Mary Moore, a terrific addition to anyone's library. A delightfull read.

REFRESHING !
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-17
Do wish that things could always remain the same? Have you found that they don't? Are you afraid that you lack the strength and ability to cope with on-going change in your life? Ms. Moore offers the concept that changes are gifts from a loving God, and invites us to consider the benefits, the inherent blessings contained in these gifts. She shares her own personal experiences in surviving cancer, and bankruptcy, just to mention a few. She also includes refreshing, insightful exercises to help one surpass the "helpless victim consciousness", and re-gain mastery over any situation. The book is further enhanced by true experiences of many of Ms. Moore's friends. Each recognized their need to change, for personal and spiritual growth. I especially liked the "Daily Problem Solver" passage, and the "Asking God a Question" exercise on pages 117-118. They are among the many tips presented in this remarkable book to help anyone handle life's difficult moments.

A Winner!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-10
I keep referring to this book because life is made of constant change. The author gives practical advice for going through change gracefully, gaining power as we go. She also gives examples from her own life to illustrate and inspire.

Facilitating Change
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2000-02-02
Through the honesty and courage expressed in this book, Mary Carroll Moore helped me facilitate change in my life! The exercises are simple, practical, and life-changing. It has become a handbook for me--every time I find myself facing a new level of change, I pull it out. Invariable, I put my hands on exactly what I need!

A useful guide for everyday living
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 1999-11-17
Recent changes in my life have made me feel confused and lostabout myself and my life. I am still quite young and in the prime ofmy life for change and personal growth. I really was looking for a book that wasn't "out there" but was more down to earth and could help me deal with my feelings of confusion and help me set a path to my life. I am taking my days one at a time now and looking for the positive in every experience thanks to this book. I am a pretty conservative person and this book has helped me to open my mind and my heart. I highly recommend it to anyone experiencing any confusion about life or anyone who feels they need some guidance. This book is guaranteed to make you feel much more in control of your own destiny and feelings.

India
I Have Lived Before: The True Story of the Reincarnation of Shanti Devi
Published in Paperback by Ozark Mountain Publishing (AR) (1998-08-01)
Author: Sture Lonnerstrand
List price: $14.00
New price: $9.99
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Average review score:

Incredible and Amazing Story
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-06
Over 50 years ago, I remember reading a passing reference to Shanti Devi and her experiences in a past life. How I could remember her name after all these years I'll never know, but I decided to get the book and read it. I could hardly put it down.

As a Christian, I have never accepted reincarnation--although I have wondered about it from time to time. If this book isn't proof of reincarnation, it comes extremely close. How she could have known all those facts were it not for reincarnation seems to defy logic. But then, trying to understand the spirit world is something beyond our ability to comprehend anyway.

It is an excellent book, relatively short, and easy to read. Quite frankly, it blew me away!

Absolutely Amazing!!!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-28
I came across a brief introduction to Shanti Devi in "The Idiots Guide to Hinduism". The story fascinated me and given I was eager to learn more about her past and present lives, I bought the book and couldn't wait to read it! Reincarnation is a concept which have been exposed to me but I've never come across a story as legit and real as Shanti Devi's experience! The facts gathered are amazing! One needs no scientific evidence to accept the fact that this case is legit, genuine... real! The author did a terrific job composing details, outlining details from her present life and past memories, as well as delving into other religions such as Christianity and explaining more about it, such as how it reincarnation was once accepted. This is a must read book for any individual interested in reading an initial true story about reincarnation and learning a little more about Hinduisim in comparison with other religions!

Hard to believe, but its 100% TRUE!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-14
Having grown up in Delhi, we had heard of the unbelievable story of Shanti Devi Mathur from my father and other relatives who grew up at that time in the same neighborhood in old Delhi.

There has never been any doubt about the absolutely truth of the story in minds of anyone growing up in old Delhi at that time. The facts in the book are completely in line with what I have always heard from family. These facts may be hard to accept for many, but do yourself a favor and read the book.....it's 100% true!

Reliable information about a classic reincarnation case
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-06
According to many investigators Near-Death Experiences suggest at least the probability of life after death. In this respect, they are connected to other experiences that do so, such as memories of a previous life.
One of the most famous early cases in this field concerns the Indian girl Shanti Devi. In the 1930s she spontaneously claimed to have been Lugdi Devi, the wife of Kedar Nath Chaubey from Mathura. This woman had died while giving birth at the young age of 23.
The numerous details that Shanti mentioned about her previous incarnation were verified as meticulously as possible by Indian researchers. Many of them concluded that the statements and behaviours shown by Shanti Devi could not be explained by mainstream scientific theories.
One of the first westerners that thoroughly investigated the case was the Swedish author Sture Lönnerstrand. He travelled to India as a skeptic and became convinced by the facts he discovered there. His book Shanti Devi, en berättelse om reinkarnation is a moving, easily accessible biography, illustrated with photographs of Shanti and other persons involved. It is very positive that this English translation was finally issued in 1998.
At a later age, Shanti Devi told Lönnerstrand what she could recall of her death as Lugdi. She still remembered that she consciously observed how a physician, a nurse, her husband and her mother had jointly decided that her body should be immediately transferred to Mathura to be burnt there. Ultimately she entered a spiritual world of Light and from there she finally returned to earth.
This book by Sture Lönnerstrand fulfills the important function of spreading reliable information about a typical, classic case of memories of a past incarnation. Scholarly reincarnation research is not an artifical 'invention' of Ian Stevenson, but it studies a natural phenomenon of all ages and regions.

Best Book on Reincarnation
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-10
Since friends know I'm interested in yoga and meditation, they often ask if I believe in reincarnation. I advise them to read I Have Lived Before by award winning Swedish journalist Sture Lonnerstrand, and make up their own minds.
If you only read one book on reincarnation, this should be the one. Shanti Devi's story is the most thoroughly researched case of reincarnation in modern India. The details of this account will make you rethink everything you thought you knew about the nature of the soul.
Don't miss this book; it's a mind blower.

India
Light on Relationships
Published in Hardcover by Motilal Banarsidass, (2002-03-01)
Authors: Hart Defouw, Robert E. Svoboda, and Hart De Fouw
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New price: $61.55
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Average review score:

Awesome book ...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-17
This is one of the most readable books on Astrology, and probably the best primer on relationship astro-analysis. It is very well written. Being an intermediate student of Astrology, I was able to follow the discussion of the entire book quite easily. It is definitely not for the beginner, but i think this is a must have for every serious student of astrology.

Illuminating
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-11-25
Here is another gem written by Hart De Fouw, but this time with another great thinker and author Robert Svoboda.
Totally unique approach emphasizing the analysis of SAMA DASHA in some cases.
And of course the language is as exquisite as before.

another insightful purview
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-12
Another insightful book by these two authors. Difficult concepts made understandable. It has helped clarify not only romantic relationships, but also given me insight into quite a number of other relationships in my life.

Illuminating
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-11-25
Here is another gem written by Hart De Fouw, but this time with another great thinker and author Robert Svoboda.
Totally unique approach emphasizing the analysis of SAMA DASHA in some cases.
And of course the language is as exquisite as before.

A Comprehensive Introductory Survey
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2002-08-07
As a Western astrologer, I found this book to be by far the best introduction to relationship analysis using Eastern astrology. The authors are adept at teaching the fundamentals of this art in a broad but comprehensive survey, while introducing you to the language and culture of the jyotishi. This text therefore gives a Westerner a nice introduction to the jyotishi's perspective in such a way that a Westerner can understand Eastern astrology in context of its culture. The authors' periodic explanations of how the two systems are different are also insightful and valuable information. The authors are humorous, intelligent, well learned and their language is very practical and down to earth. What I am amazed at is how comprehensive this introductory survey is. Eastern astrology is an ancient, accurate and intricate art, and this text is a great starting point if you are pursuing this path of learning, particularly if you already have a Western perspective.

India
Meditation is for You: An Introduction to the Science and Art of Meditation
Published in Hardcover by Nithyananda Foundation (2005)
Author: Paramahamsa Sri Nithyananda
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New price: $17.99

Average review score:

Lots of techniques in a small book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-27
This is a book packed with meditation techniques. There's technique of technique. I never new there were this many ways to meditate!

Simple and Powerful
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-10
A must read for anyone who is getting started with mediation.

I also liked the simple and easy to understand English language.

Excellent Guide to Meditation
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-09
This book gives a beautiful introduction to meditation. It answers many basic questions on meditation with great clarity. It also introduces the reader to a variety of simple, fun and effective techniques - there is something for everyone here! A must read- highly recommended!

Great Book to enter into Meditation
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-06
This is an excellent book that reveals the science behind meditation. It is a must for anyone who wants to start or understand Meditation. This book gives facts about what meditation is and how one can move from just contemplating to actually doing (or being in) it. The book also has some simple techniques at the end which are very simple but make impact on our daily actions. Even for those who are from east some facts about meditation could be very revealing. I followed this book with Guaranteed Solutions (for Sex, Worry, Fear, Jealousy, Attention-need, Ego, Discontent) which takes you further deep into meditation and tells it all about the inner science created by great masters of the east.

For the Curious, the Novice & the Seekers
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-09
I have dabbled in meditation practice for over 10 years... a little bit of this and a little bit of that... and thought I knew what I was doing.
However, after reading this book I realized I didn't really fathom all the benefits of a full on meditation program. This book explains in very simple terms various techniques that can concentrate and focus on different areas in ones life. There have been noticable results since practicing the techniques described in this meditation manual.

The best part of this book is that it makes meditation exciting and adventerous ! That is what meditation is supposed to be - a fun journey of discovery - and here is your road map !

I gave my book to a dear friend that was stuck in a depressed rut and he has since bounced back and been rejuvinated after practicing just a few of the techniques described in the book.

Now I own another copy and this will book will continue to be the best gift I can give to my loved ones: the gift of meditation.

India
Prince Siddhartha: The Story of Buddha
Published in Paperback by Wisdom Publications (2003-10-25)
Author: Jonathan Landaw
List price: $18.95
New price: $10.69
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Average review score:

Excellent Start for Buddhist Kids
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-08
The little guy i bought this for loves it. It is simple, beautifully illustrated, and content laden with great values. Some Buddhist lit for kids is too vague & overly symbolic, but this book tells the story of Prince Siddhartha well. There are some short moral stories at the end aside from the life story e.g. the Buddha & the angry elephant.

A Great Introduction to the Life of the Buddha and Buddhism!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-31
Hey guys :-)

I originally bought this book for my nephew to read. I wanted to expand his horizons on subjects he wasn't familiar with, so I figured this book would be a great introduction to Buddhism. I never read it myself, but when it arrived in the mail today, I was tempted to jump right in.

Wow! It was so good, I finished it in one session. So often, I came across Buddhist books and teachings that seemed to complicate the Buddha's simple message of inner transformation and showing kindness and respect for others. It was difficult for me to find information on the Buddha's life without it complicating things, so this book was a breath of fresh air. Colorful illustrations wonderfully complemented the exciting story of how Prince Siddhartha came to be the Buddha. This book was both easy to understand and inspiring. I was particularly excited at the vivid account of Siddhartha meditating under the Tree of Enlightenment as Mara (the evil force representing our negative thoughts and emotions) tried everything in his power to thwart his efforts ('The Great Battle', pages 92-97). I feel this represents the struggle we all face to overcome our limiting, self-destructive selves.

Even though I'm not a Buddhist, reading about the Buddha's interactions with all kinds of people inspired me to practice my own spiritual exercises more fervently in hopes of one day attaining the same conscious state of bliss the Buddha experienced. The Buddha's behavior and lifestyle very much reminded me of the Gnostic Jesus.

Please keep in mind that this book is an introduction to Buddhism. Don't expect to find any detailed description of practices used to attain Buddhahood. That's beyond the scope of this book.

This book isn't just for Buddhists; it's for anyone open-minded and willing enough to learn from a great human being. It's all about LOVE. :-)

What more can I say? I loved this book from start to finish, and I'm sure my nephew will too.

Thanks for your time. Take care.
Kevin :-)

buddha kid's book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-27
beautiful illustrations. wonderful story. great for any child who would like to find out more about buddhism, or mother for that matter.

Wonderful
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-13
Excellent book for children to introduce them to Buddhism. Would highly recommend this wonderful story; brilliant pictures and narrative. A must have for local library :D

Perfect
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-30
This is a great introduction to the life of Buddha. All ages can benefit from this story. My son read it from cover to cover. Let's just say, to get him to read is nothing less than impossible. He read it without my asking him to. He just picked it up and read. He is 13 and totally enjoyed it.

India
State of the Heart: A Medical Tourist's True Story of Lifesaving Surgery in India
Published in Hardcover by New Harbinger Publications (2007-08)
Author: Maggi Ann Grace
List price: $24.95
New price: $5.99
Used price: $2.48

Average review score:

Astonishing. I had no idea...
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-30
You won't believe the account of this experience. What happens when people are proactive about arranging with the hospital to pay out of pocket for an expensive surgery? What conditions do they encounter when they trek to India to have it done affordably? Where does the money go when we or our insurance company pays some 4000% of the cost of the same surgery done in another country? Warning, this book will spawn as many new questions as it answers. You won't find this stuff out anywhere else. Just read it.

a must read
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-26
WOW! Like any great piece of art, this book achieves the impossible - it speaks to a wide range of fundamental topics and raises profound questions, while simultaneously remaining very accessible, open to interpretation, and close to home. By staying within the context of her fascinating personal memoir, the author avoids political preaching and dry statistics. She doesn't tell you about the problems with our health-care system - she SHOWS you. She doesn't tell you what India was like - she takes you there. Come to your own conclusions about the developing world, about medical tourism, about our country's inability to take care of its citizens. But first, read this book.

what our health insurnace has come to.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-25
I thouroughly enjoyed reading about this and realized that its much more affordable to do it this way, i.e. combining travelling abroad and major surgery, than to help finance the huge insurance complex in this country.

Fascinating!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-08
I've never known anything about India beyond dealing with customer service reps named "Buzz," "Chuck" and "Barbie" who mysteriously have heavy Indian accents. This book gives me a whole new vision of this fascinating country.

The medical saga is exciting but also tragic, in that it should never have had to happen. Look at the city life described in the book; look at city life in our country. Now ask: Why would a productive American citizen have to travel to India for affordable health care? Can't we take care of our own? This book examines the whys and hows of getting medical care overseas with the facts enveloped in a readable, personal story.

Fixing a broken health care system
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-03
State of the Heart shines a glaring spotlight on our broken health care system here in the United States. To think that a $200,000 procedure here can be done for less than $10,000 in India is unbelievable.

As one of millions of Americans who can't afford health insurance, after reading this book I would have no problem going to India for care. In Howard's case, the treatment he received in the hospital there was much better than the treatment he got in the hospital here in the States, at a fraction of the cost.

This book also gives you a sense of the streets of India, the sights and sounds, so different from our own. It portrays the people of India as gracious, caring souls.

I can only hope if the situation ever arises, I will have a guardian angel like Maggi to help me through it!

India
Urdu/Hindi: An Artificial Divide (HC) (Politics of Language)
Published in Hardcover by Algora Publishing (2006-08-01)
Author: Abdul Jamil Khan
List price: $39.95
New price: $39.95

Average review score:

Creationists challengend
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-06
Asthe author ,I do appreciate all comments with gratitude/thanks.Some

readers have really been distressed as the book delinks the linguistic

classification " Semitic/ Aryan-Indo-european "based on Noahs'three children/ or indian myth of Sanskrit as the mother of all ; these being the "matter of faith".The book really rekindles the cold war between the

priestology and scientific evolution which got started with the mesopotamian discoveries; The linguistic families meanwhile are believed

as a " FINAL scientific" discovery; the book has reopened the old wound and reignited the debate" REVELATION vs EVOLUTION". Feel embarassed to

give 5 stars to my own book but am convinced that Languages evolved in

africa ,polished in mideast and diseminated by the farmers; this is the

state of art in linguistics.



Linguistic Analysis
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-18
The author must be congratulated for an indepth review of a very sensitive topic. His analysis is impartial and thought provoking. This author must be
complimented for his zeal and relentless pursuit of linguistic history.I wish that more people read his work and learn the truth based on research and facts.

Excellent !
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-15
The Politics of Language is a book written in an interesting way in its centuries old historical prospective as the human societies developed and started integrating.
Language helped people to know each other irrespective of their faith and believe.
However, Britain , who ruled India after the fall of Mughal umpire , used language as political weapon to dive Hindu and Muslim by getting their brain washed that Hindi is Hindu and Urdu is Muslim.
The political use of language by British India , as writer Abdul Jamail Khan has dwelt in length in his book, is a scientific analysis how the rulers divide the people to achieve their objective.
Dr Khan , s book is a valuable addition in the languages books written by
other writers but his book urges people all over the world to avoid hating each
on the basis of language as for centuries language has a great force in integrating the society.

Revealing !
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-09
The book presents the science of the evolution of written language dating its origin some 6000 years ago to the Middle East/ Mesopotamia. The reader is guided through a wonderfully educational and eye-opening tour of the development of language and its migration and transformation as it traveled across continents. The early chapters are exquisitely detailed, defining a sound foundation on which the remainder of the book is developed. Moreover, by the time one traverses through these pages, the facts and messages become abundantly clear.

The author, backed by meticulously researched historical facts, provides example after example of the dating of selected Urdu words as far back as 3000 years bc ! Furthermore, the reader is educated of the ugly interests of the ruling British empire, and how it manipulated the psyche of its subjects by lending religious and nationalistic identities to one language over another. The book is sprayed with countless examples of the ways in which the British used the politics of manipulating language to weaken the bonds of this integrated, religiously diverse society and divided the population and ultimately the subcontinent by labeling Urdu as Foreign and Muslim while Hindi being Patriotic and Hindu.

The author boldly goes on to uncover and correctly describe how the British appealed to the psyche of the pseudoproud Indians by also claiming themselves as Aryan and thereby winning the hearts of their Indian Aryan "brethren." These energized fanatics pursued their agenda resulting in the loss of Urdu as the national language just after the tail end of British rule in 1947. The Phoenetic and Gene theories the author eloquently describes are also quite interesting and convincing.

This tragic history of the Partition was a personal childhood ordeal that the author vividly describes and has wonderfully translated to tangible emotions that the reader can comprehend. As we move along through the later chapters, the author describes an ambitious revival of Urdu and related cultural activities not only in India through arts, cinema and poetry, but also through the emigrating populations throughout the Middle East, Europe and the West.

The Politics of Language is a wonderfully articulate book that is both educational and a revealing commentary on the surreptitious manipulation by a foreign power to divide a once strong and unified society. The author should be congratulated for such a profound and elucidating piece of work.

An Impeccable Gem
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-23
Dr. Jamil Khan does not shy away from introducing a new theory: that the British Empire deliberately created an "artificial divide" in the language of the Indian Hindus and Muslims. Instead of going along with the masses, Dr.Khan painstakingly researches and questions what has been largely accepted for generations-and offers an answer that fits even better.

He discusses how, contrary to what the British said at the time, that people of Indian/Pakistani/Bangladeshi heritage are the descendants of common ancestors and share the same culture. Dr. Khan says that despite what others believe, Urdu was not derived from Arabic/Farsi, rather Urdu words were already in existence even before the Arab conquests in India. He traces Sanskrit back to Syria and Turkey.

Well-researched and well-written, the book gives in-depth information and creates a great deal of interest in a seemingly dry subject. Once begun, it is hard to put the book down. Simple, clear language and easy-to-read tables make the book even more enjoyable. This book is a gem for those who have even the remotest interest in history and linguistics: it is a must-read. The author must be congratulated and commended by linguists for his bold and unbiased effort to introduce a new-and perhaps more accurate-theory, challenging one that has been generally accepted for generations.

India
Amma: Healing the Heart of the World
Published in Hardcover by William Morrow & Company (2001-05)
Author: Judith Cornell
List price: $24.00
New price: $9.99
Used price: $1.66
Collectible price: $24.00

Average review score:

An informative, profound, and beautiful spiritual book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-16
This book is written by an American scholar who is working on her thesis about Women's spirituality who falls in love with Amma, the Indian Saint. She tries to keep her scientific hat on as she begins her journey, but Amma's power is so strong that she becomes changed and has her heart opened by Amma. For me, this is the power of this book. This author has a true and strong voice and her doubts and questions mirror my own search. I so enjoyed her way of presenting sometimes shocking facts with grace and an evenhanded tone--but still, her love for Amma shines thorough every page of this story. This made me fall in love with Amma and this book! I've bought dozens of used copies at Amazon and on ebay to give to friends and they all adore it. I hope it comes back into print soon!

The Life of Mata Amritanandamayi a Hindu Saint.
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-26
I was on vacation in India for a month and I visited a niece of mine. While talking to her I heard the chanting of Bhajans from the neighborhood and I inquired as to what was going on. She reported that in the neighborhood was a house where the devotees of Mata Amritanandamayi gathered every week and prayed to her in front of a framed photograph of hers. I was curious and went in to ascertain it. There were about 50 men and women seated in front of her picture, chanting hymns. It was an eye-opening experience for me. Earlier in the week, I had passed through the front of the Amrita Institute of Medical Sciences in Cochin and had heard from many about the facilities over there. Now, I decided to learn more about this person considered a saint in India.

Reading through this book helped me to situate the phenomenon of Mata Amritanandamayi. No doubt the book is trying to depict in an objective light this charismatic woman, Amma (Mother) as she is understood and looked upon by thousands of her devotees. As a miracle healer, prophet and mystic she has established her fame. Her world tours have attracted attention to herself as an incarnation of the Divine Mother. By now she has grown into a big institution worthy of attention by the world. Judith Cornell by this book is presenting her along with her ideas and gifts to the western world. She tries to bring in personages familiar to the American readers, like Padre Pio, Bede Griffiths and C G Jung in relating to the ideas and message of this Hindu saint. She also refers to the black Madonna and the Christian understanding of Virgin Mary the Mother of God. The Catholic and Orthodox Christian belief in the Blessed Mother is very different from the concept of the Divine feminine found in Hinduism, though there are some comparisons possible. What Cornell ends up doing is to bring the East and West closer. The story of the rise of Sudhamani, an ordinary girl from the family of a poor fishermen couple on the coast of Kollam, India to the world renowned Mata Amritanandamayi is fascinating. Her story is told as it is known and spoken of around her birthplace, by her family members and her devotees around the world. Her ideas are presented in simple words, understandable to the ordinary folks, though they are typically Hindu in their perspective. The Hindu pantheon could absorb any number of seers and sages as incarnations of the Divine. So there are repeated mentions of Buddha and Jesus Christ in the book.

I found this a valuable book, useful for anyone who wants to know more about the saints and sages of the land of India. It gives one a somewhat objective look at the phenomenon of Mata Amritanandamayi along with her humble past, her mystic experiences and her compassion for the poor; it provides one the opportunity to hear the various opinions of many of her devotees deeply touched by her. All these contribute to the immense popularity of this saint of today, whose activities in favor of the poor are widely recognized.

Informative but flawed
Helpful Votes: 15 out of 24 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-10
That Ammachi is a great living saint is beyond dispute. She is revered by millions in East and West and leads an exemplary life of humility, service and compassion. This new biography of Amma will be a good introduction for those who are not acquainted with the Holy Mother of Amritapuri. Having said that, it needs to be added that some aspects of the book are disappointing. As a new biography it doesn't provide much new info beyond the official bio already in print. And it is written in a naively uncritical tone, appealing to the lowest common demoninator of readership. Obscure Indian scientists are trotted out as 'experts' in their field just because their opinions happen to support Amma's pronouncements. One can find an 'expert' to support virtually any scientific opinion. There is a short re-cap of events involving the collapse of the Soviet Union. Who is the author writing for? What literate, semi-educated person is not acquainted with these facts already? Most annoying is the author's starry-eyed romanticization of India. Like so many western followers of eastern gurus, she goes through India with blinders on. She seems to have left her critical facility at the door along with her shoes. While she describes the horrors of traveling in North India - the choking smog and chaos in the cities - she never asks herself who is responsible for creating the disasters of modern India. The author attempts to blame the racist attitudes inherent in the appalling caste system on western missionaries. The oppression of the darker-skinned lower castes by the lighter-skinned Brahmin elite has been going on for many centuries, well before the first Europeans set foot on the sub-continent. If India has one of the world's most repressive, backward and corrupt social arrangements, it is because the Indians have made a nice mess of it all by themselves. The world needs to hear about Ammachi, but we needed a biography with more integrity than this one.

Amma: Healing the Heart of the World
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-07-30
Judith Cornell has written a beautiful, many layered biography of Ammachi. It is an incredibly difficult task to convey the depth of Amma's mission with the words of a finite language, yet Judith has more than succeeded.

It is a blessing to know Amma, and a gift to know the life she lived before I was even born. For others and myself who were in India during the time that Judith was writing this book her offering also has the added gift of recounting what we all experienced. It is a rare blessing.

I am especially thankful that Judith wrote this book. It was very timely to retell Amma's life story and to place it within the context of our changing times (especially with what women have achieved and still must work to gain).

Amma is "Healing the Heart of the World" in giant acts, and also in reaching within the very core of each individual, healing the personal wounds and sufferings of this world.

In the wake of what we now face in our present world there are few books other than this one that have the power to bring insight and change on a global level.

Excellent introduction to Ammachi's life
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2001-11-14
This book is an excellent introduction to Ammachi's life - especially for a Westerner. For those who already know Amma, the offical biography by Amma's senior disciple might be better.

This book also touches upon the fact that downfall of Indian civilization occurred at the hands of unfriendly external cultures. Notably Arabs from the present-day Afghanistan and later from European Colonials (please note - I draw a distinction between a European and a racist European colonial).

Even a strong economy like America's will collapse if it comes under sustained terrorist attacks over a period of 100 years or more. In a similar fashion the reason for economic depravation of India was not mismanagement by Indians (as another reviewer has written) but sustained attacks on India by violent and unfriendly cultures. A person who wins a war and kills thousands of people cannot be stamped culturally superior to the person who lost the war (on contrary, the more violent and brutal a culture is, more likely it is to go on a successful rampage).

Lastly, one must note in Vedic culture there was no place for skin color and such nonsense. Most of India's ancient saints were black in color (from the description written by their followers).

Casteism was a social order, not a hardened discriminatory practice. In fact the sage who compiled Vedas and wrote Mahabharata - Veda Vyasa - was born to a fisherwoman and not of high caste. Another example is Valmiki - the sage poet who wrote Ramayana - he was a hunter who lived near a forest, but who undertook great penance and became a sage. Through ages Indians and people who respect Indic culture have revered them.

The hardened casteism came about because of external influences in later periods, even then brahmins have never burnt lower-castes or people of other religion at stakes as has happened elsewhere.

India
Astronomical Code of the Rgveda
Published in Hardcover by Aditya Prakashan,India (2000-02-04)
Author: Subhash Kak
List price:

Average review score:

Not enough hardcore evidence
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-03-31
The book is intriguing and definitely plants the seeds for researching the true nature of Ancient India. However, there is no hardcore scientific evidence provided that lends credibility to the author's findings.

I'd like to see the author expand on this book with more scientific evidence.

It explains many mysteries about the Rgveda
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-29
The book presents a compelling case for an astronomical code in the organization of the Rgveda. The number of hymns in the various books have symmetries that turn out to be related to the astronomical ritual of the fire altars. In the words of Klostermaier: "I had long suspected that there was something to the Rgveda which went far beyond what our philology and history could read out. Here it is.... an epoch-making discovery."

The book discusses related material in the Brahmanas and also questions of chronology. This book should be essential reading for all students of Indian civilization.

Great book on Indian astronomy!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-03
Astronomy is central to the understanding of the Indian civilization, as it is to that of other ancient civilizations. This book is the best introduction to the subject, and it also presents the author's rediscovery of long-forgotten elements of this subject. The book is clearly written and touches upon a wealth of material.

Pathbreaking
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-29
Our understanding of ancient science is transformed thanks to the pioneering work of Neugebauer and Kak. Neugebauer, by decoding the Mesopotamian tablets, showed how much of mathematics and astronomy Mesopotamians knew. Kak has pulled off an equally impressive scholarly feat by disovering a long-forgotten astronomy and mathematics of the early Indians of the 2nd millennium BC. Kak's work is a veritable tour de force since no one had suspected what he found in the Indic texts; his work explains many gaps in the earlier accounts of Indian civilization. The best introduction to Kak's work is THE ASTRONOMICAL CODE OF THE RGVEDA, which is an excellent guide to the more technical scholarly papers on the subject.

This is a book that should be compulsory for all students of Indian history. It opens new pathways in the labyrinth of Indian culture and provides concepts that help us see the Vedic world on its own terms.

A Must for Every Historian
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2001-01-24
This book presents a revolutionary new view of India's Vedic period. The author has discovered a long-lost astronomy of the Vedic texts which allows us to establish a chronology of that period with reasonable certainty. This chronology has the greatest significance in our understanding of ancient India and its civilization as also of the other Indo-European people. I recommend this book strongly!

India
Bachelor of Arts
Published in Hardcover by William Heinemann Ltd (1978-11-20)
Author: R.K. Narayan
List price:
Used price: $99.36

Average review score:

The education of a melancholy bachelor
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-19
"The Bachelor of Arts" is the second of a thematic trilogy that begins with "Swami and Friends" and ends with "The English Teacher"--three novels that collectively take their characters from the innocence of youth through the disappointment of love to life's first tragedy. Yet this tale of Chandran, a college graduate unlucky in love, is (as Graham Greene notes in his introduction) "a funny and happy book" at its core--particularly when compared to Narayan's later melancholy, tragic books--yet a closer reading shows us the "shadow [that] had been there from the beginning."

The first part of "Bachelor" is an unexpected treat: a farcical, satirical look at the sillier, exhausting rituals of academic life in colonial India. The opening scene features a debate on whether "historians should be slaughtered first"--and Chandran, a history student himself, is required to argue in the affirmative. From there, our poor student is appointed by his professor as secretary of the school's new Historical Association, an honor that adds to his duties but hardly helps his studies. In between, he frequents the cinema with his best friend and dutifully maps out a grand plan for exam preparation--a plan that is revised daily due to the impossibility of following it.

The debate society, his friends, his academic career--all has been poor preparation for life's setbacks. ("The classroom or the club or the office created friendships. When the circumstances changed the relations, too, snapped.") The giddiness of the novel takes a sharp turn when the circumstances do change: Chandran falls in love at first sight and is rejected, causing him to cast aside the comforts of life and to leave home. The rest of the novel follows our Bachelor of Arts (still a bachelor in life) as he educates himself about the one subject neglected during his collegiate career: himself. It's such a simple and simply told story, but it illustrates beautifully the complexities of finding one's place in the world.

A young man finding his place in India
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-04-23
I could identify with the main character as he completed his studies and began moving into the 'real' world. His spiritual journey, though not complete at the books end, was very interesting. The (paraphrased) line "they thought they were the first of their type and the last..", referring to his radical friends from his university days, struck a chord. We all slowly realize that our own well-used mold was indeed not broken after they made us. More followed. Alas, we all take our place in society and make the best of it.

Simply written and easy to read. I recommend it.

Its good... as always
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-10-10
I have read and liked R K Narayan's works in the past. I picked this one up just based on the fact that it was written by him. It was not recommended to me by anyone. And honestly i am so glad i did.
The main character is a student just out of undergrad and facing the decision of what ahead. In a very straight and simple manner Narayan portrays the character's struggles with choosing a career and then his foray into love. Its simple and yet extraordinary. BTW for those expecting a dramatic ending, don't. This book just ends. I had to turn the page to realise its finished :-)

Excellent book
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2002-09-07
The story of Chandran, a final-year student of History, on how love tranforms ambitions, alters goals and changes lives is the theme of this wonderful book.

Written masterfully with just the right amounts of comedy, emotions and twists, and teeming with sarcasm characteristic of Narayan, this book takes a broad look at values and customs. For example, the long scenes wheres discussion about horoscopes and Chandran's disagreement with his mother are all so very close to life in India.

A great book, an excellent read....

Young and educated in South Asia
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-19
A very pleasant and interesting look at the life of a young man in South Asia. Only moderately engaged by his studies at the university, Chandran spends most of his time going to movies, staying out late, drinking at the café, and generally socializing with his friends. With some prodding from his father, he overcomes his laziness sufficiently to graduate, only to find his problems just beginning.

Chandran's predicament should be very familiar to many readers. Bright and charismatic, but lacking any real focus, he has difficulty finding employment. Upon graduation his peer group separates, and he needs to make new friends. And his parents, who are only eager to see him make something of himself, can't help but find fault with his carefree, unproductive lifestyle. What's a Bachelor of Arts to do? His unrequited love for a young girl named Malathi makes for an interesting look at how courting was handled in traditional Indian families not so many decades ago, complete with horoscopes and dowries and class consciousness. But ultimately, isn't it the couples' willingness to commit to each other that matters, and not how they happen to meet? Every bit as fascinating is Chandran's sojourn as an ascetic, which is reminiscent of a Hermann Hesse novel, but with a uniquely critical perspective that only a native Indian could provide.

Narayan's prose has a warm serenity that never fails to evoke small-town South Asia. What his plots lack in excitement and intensity, they make up for in geniality. This particular novel has perhaps a little more excitement than some of the others, and would be a good entry point for young people just discovering Narayan.


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