India Books
Related Subjects: Associations Players Coaching
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Excellent short stories about Sikh women in transitionReview Date: 1999-09-27
EXCELLENTReview Date: 1999-07-13
The narrative and characters remain with me two years later. What more can a reader ask for?
Superb, lyrical account of the Punjabi immigrant experienceReview Date: 1997-12-24


Family Travels No Other WayReview Date: 2004-05-01
Great across-the-globe non-fiction!Review Date: 2003-06-04
A biased reviewReview Date: 2003-03-28
The adventures of this family in India provide a primer for any family on how to adapt to new surroundings and strange experiences quickly and well. If you are planning a trip to a developing country, this book should be in your luggage.


Refreshingly filled with God's palpable essenceReview Date: 1998-02-27
His shining light between the sentences,
dancing with the words. The real-life vignettes are wonderful!
a superb page-turner--inspiring and enthrallingReview Date: 1998-02-27
of potent, poetic images, intimate and
fascinating life details and real insight into
the nature, direction and synchronicities of
following a God-Realized Master in today's world.
Along with the inspirational material, superb
metaphors, and wisdom, I think the book
fills a significant niche. [Special appreciation
by the way for the material on Repeating God's
Name, tidbits like VP Gore's contact with
Meher Baba, and the light touch in much of the
poetry.] We've never before had published
biographical material about American followers
of Meher Baba that readers can identify with.
I admire the home-movie quality the author
brings to this volume.
Allan Y. Cohen, Ph.D., clinical psychologist;
author of Mastery of Consciousness (Harper),
co-author, Understanding Drug Use:
an Adult's Guide to Drugs and the Young. (Harper)
An important contribution to the literature about Meher BabaReview Date: 1998-02-28
through a near-death experience that changed him instantaneously
from an agnostic to a spiritual seeker, erased his lifelong fear of death
and eradicated his crippling addictions. He "...exploded into a brilliance
beyond anything I could imagine, and I was immersed in the warmth
and joy of a Living Presence that loved me and accepted me totally."
During the experience, Stephens saw a face in the light that he later
identified as the great 20th century spiritual master, Avatar Meher Baba.
That was the beginning of the author's love affair with God. His
compelling book includes many personal and graphic stories
of the ups and downs of treading the Path of Love by following
the divine footsteps of the Master.
The author has written many previous books about science and the
oceans, marine animals, and undersea research. But this
is his finest work because it comes straight from the heart.
Used price: $34.89

Contemporary, healthy, EASY - and goodReview Date: 2006-10-22
The dishes have a contemporary, lighter twist, so they're not as traditional, but they're healthier and taste just as good. It also includes a great reference section for spices and other ingredients.
This is a Good Book to Start with if You Want to Cook IndianReview Date: 2006-10-12
While I was doing the guide, I pulled out all my Indian Cookbooks, had them all stacked around me. Then I decided to pull out all the ones I didn't think I could live without. It came to an even dozen and Fresh Indian was one of the books. The recipes are just divine. I've never been to India, been a lot of places, but never there. Delhi, Bombay, Ganges, names that just ring with adventure. I imagine I'm there every time I cook up something Indian. I can feel the smells as they wrap their delicious flavors all around the kitchen, or galley, if I'm cooking on board the sailboat my husband Dub and I live on half the year. You won't go wrong with this book. Check it out. Check out my other eleven too. Cook up something from India tonight, taste the adventure.
Review submitted by Captain Katie Osborne
A MustReview Date: 2005-11-07

Used price: $4.85

Seven Steps To Global ChangeReview Date: 2003-05-25
Essential reading for a peaceful futureReview Date: 2001-09-23
Outstanding and Concise Summary of Gandhi's StrategiesReview Date: 2002-02-12

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Ten star superb readReview Date: 2008-07-22
And how Tolstoy played a role in molding his views on all things spiritual as well as observations on how Gandhi's view effected issues like the environment, feminism, business and human rights in general.
A Definitive Biography of Gandhi -- But With Breathtaking Windows into His HeartReview Date: 2008-03-07
Why buy this new book? (And I do urge you to buy it if you are intrigued by this figure who strides across the history of religion like a tireless titan to this day.)
Well, first of all, here's what this book is not. This isn't a breezy read and it isn't a fresh interpretation of one particular aspect or one particular era of Gandhi's life. Even though the biographer is Gandhi's grandson, who was a child when Gandhi was murdered, this is not a memoir of a close associate.
Millions have read Louis Fischer's breezy introduction, first published in 1954. There's probably a paperback edition of Fischer somewhere in your public, school or parish library. You may even have a well-worn copy on your shelf. If you know that version -- Fischer's book (which still stands as a fine introduction) is like a magazine story compared to this full biography.
A number of more ambitious biographies also have been published down through the years, including Eknath Easwaran's 1972 effort to describe Gandhi's "transformation" -- and Yogesh Chadha's thick biography more recently.
What I like about Gandhi's new biography of Gandhi is the substantial, almost formal, way in which the grandson has cast this book as The Definitive Biography. And I agree. To put it simply, I think this is the version of Gandhi's life that we will find on library shelves 25 years from now as the recommended book to read to delve into his life.
"Delve" is a key word here, because you're in for a good long adventure here. At 754 pages, this is a brick of a book. It is "definitive" in the sense that it is a solid, detailed, chronological biography. It's the kind of presentation that will leave readers really feeling that they have trekked with Gandhi across continents -- and through his spiritual and political journeys.
More detailed reviews of this book, published in India, point to very specific aspects within the book -- and the way the author took a balanced approach to them, rather than pulling the most dramatic or provocative bits of Gandhi's life out of context. Generally, Indian media has praised this book.
I share all of this background with you so that you understand exactly what will arrive on your doorstep with a thud if you order this book. It's an adventure in reading that you're going to want to pursue, perhaps, for some weeks.
Now, here's what I really love about this book: In the midst of the chronological tapestry that the biographer weaves from Gandhi's life -- we find these vivid images that open up from time to time. Having just finished my own journey through the book -- I don't think I'll forget the passages of Gandhi's own writing, late in life, that the biographer chooses to leave us with. Yes, we're moving through the detailed account of the final months of his life with dates, places, events and context all described. But, this provides a framework in which the biographer places these windows into Gandhi's own insights. And, in that final section of the book as an example, he has deftly chosen the most vividly revealing passages -- from a satirical note about snakes that Gandhi scribbled to a critic to an achingly beautiful passage about forgiving one's own assassin that Gandhi wrote not long before he was shot down.
It's a big book and a big investment in time -- but well worth the journey.
InspirationalReview Date: 2008-07-17
He defied the unjust authority with wisdom and pacifism.
How ironic that the British Empire, supposedly the torch of liberty and equality stood like a brick wall in the face of Gandhi.
Gandhi was India's first free spirited intellectual to raise a red flag against the notorious Indian cast system.
This book retraces memorable moments in his life.
The book is up-lifting and inspirational.
It is nourishment for the soul.

Used price: $11.20

ExcellentReview Date: 2000-10-10
A link between East and WestReview Date: 2002-07-27
Everything you ever wanted to know about ancient IndogreeksReview Date: 2000-08-31
Several years ago, other historians, such as Tarn, have published on the topic. This is a fresh view with a philosophical twist that deserves study and understanding.

Used price: $66.98

The best available book on birds of Indian subcontinent.Review Date: 1999-01-27
The best guide for the birds of the Indian Subcontinent.Review Date: 1999-06-13
No other guide comes close in quality of drawings, text and range maps. Though too large and heavy to be called a field guide. It is still brought on trips to be reviewed after a day in the field.
We eagerly await the publication of this book as a true 'field guide'- that will be useable in the field.
Comprehensive and excellent, but not a field guideReview Date: 1999-11-05

Handbook of AyurvedaReview Date: 2008-04-24
An excellent introductionReview Date: 1999-04-07
One of the best introductions to ayurveda,Review Date: 1999-04-30

The Harmony of Emptiness and Dependent-ArisingReview Date: 2008-05-25
All schools of Buddhism expound theories of emptiness and dependent-arising, but their interpretations vary greatly and are even contradictory. Here, Ven. Lobsang Gyatso, very skillfully explains these two theories through logical analysis combined with simple and wonderful illustrations.
--- from book's back cover
A Rare Find. Simply wonderful.Review Date: 2004-03-31
This is not a deep philosophical treatise. It is much more practical and accessible than such a treatise would be. First, it presents a simple and straightforward translation of a short text by Je Tsongkhapa, The Essence of Eloquent Speech, Praise to the Buddha for Teaching Profound Dependent-Arising. Then the main body of the book is a very well done, concise, verse by verse commentary on this text by Ven. Lobsang Gyatso. It consistently hits just the right tone and depth. It might be a helpful summary for someone well versed in these ideas from more in-depth study and meditation, but it will also be a marvelous introduction for a student/practitioner just beginning to get their feet wet in this difficult area. Of course, only someone of this author's great wisdom and experience could distill the essence of these teachings into a form so light and readily accessible. You will be fortunate indeed to find and read this pith teaching.
Years ago when I practiced Hindu spirituality, before I became a Buddhist, I used to love to find small, old, quaint volumes in English of the great Hindu scriptures, printed in India. I loved the juxtaposition of the most sublime teachings with the most primitive printing and binding technology. This book is printed in India: It does not disappoint! While the binding is almost up to Western standards, the typos are so frequent that I often had to play detective to figure out the meaning. If you don't sort of already know what the book is talking about, you may occasionally be a bit lost at such moments, but if you find that this sort of thing makes the book more lively, you'll enjoy yourself. I laughed long and hard when I read about "the emptiness of the elf", which really does go a long way towards adopting the proper attitude towards the SELF we all take so seriously!
Obscure, but brilliant!Review Date: 1999-04-04
Related Subjects: Associations Players Coaching
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