India Books
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Used price: $25.80

Indian Head MassageReview Date: 2005-10-26
Indian Head MassageReview Date: 2000-03-26

Used price: $15.33

GoodReview Date: 2007-01-19
An exceptional presentation.Review Date: 2006-11-07
Diane C. Donovan
California Bookwatch

Gives Indian Cinema a perspectiveReview Date: 2000-09-29
The book is well-researched and very enjoyable. Without going into too much details about specific films, it tries to highlight the trends and unique genres developed in Indian films over a century. Having grown up on Hindi movies all my life, I found the book interesting, but I think it is more relevant to the western audience. It provides a good introduction and starting point to those just discovering the magical world of Hindi movies.
For those who are into in-depth study of Indian cinema, I recommend "Encyclopedia of Indian Cinema" by Ashish Rajadhyaksha and Paul Willeman.
Excellent, , informative and eminently readable.Review Date: 1999-07-30

Used price: $9.95

A Children's ClassicReview Date: 2008-06-23
This is a book that is both insightful and fun. The stories are simple and straightforward but also carry deeper meanings and significance.
Plus the illustrations are a bonus! They paint a rich and descriptive picture of the Indian subcontinent.
"Damayanti and Nala," the love story was my favorite.
Well done Nanji.
Indian Tales Will Impress All Readers- Young and OldReview Date: 2008-01-07
Title: Indian Tales
Author: Shenaaz Nanji
Illustrator: Christopher Corr
Publisher: Barefoot Books
ISBN: 978-1-84686-083-6
Review By: Diana Rohini LaVigne, Indian Life & Style Magazine
Vibrant. Alluring. Brilliant. Indian Tales by Shenaaz Nanji and illustrated by Christopher Corr is a phenomenal collection of daily life stories from different regions of India. Each section takes on the personality of the region and brings forward the colors and imagery from that region's lifestyle and legends.
Together the collection of stories weave a beautifully written work of art that will delight children and adults alike. From the tale of the young drummer boy named Gopal to the royal narrative about the princess Damayanti, Indian Tales delivers a book filled with information, poetry and culturally-rich images that promise to enchant adolescent readers.
It is a book that begs to be read and reread over and over again. Nanji does a superior job winning the interest of readers and keeping them coming back from more. Readers will explore deeper into the regions with each read and images will continue to reinforce the information learned. Indian Tales is an important piece of cultural literature and should be on the top of wish lists for schools and libraries around the global.

Used price: $289.97

WW1--an unfamiliar viewReview Date: 2001-11-20
The First World War from an Indian Soldier's ViewpointReview Date: 2007-01-07
accustomed to at the hands of their British masters in India. This is expressed again and again in several letters. They were surprised also at the attitude of their British mentors who behaved so differently in their own country and almost treated them as equals. Today we find it surprising that these soldiers would be willing to lay their lives on behalf of their foreign masters for a few dollars a month, to be gassed and blinded, buried in swamps, without even knowing the actual causes of
the War or the consequences if the other side had come out as victors.
Such was their innocence! This book can very engrossing for those interested in the First World War, as the expressive letters very clearly
portray the feelings of wounded soldiers afraid to go back to the front a second time.

Excellent Book!!!Review Date: 2004-01-30
GREAT BOOK!Review Date: 2004-01-30

Exceptionally good work by a true expert on Buddhist tantraReview Date: 2006-08-04
Many people will come to Snellgrove's Indo-Tibetan Buddhism specifically due to their interest in and perhaps practice of Vajrayana Buddhism of the Tibetan variety and will be most drawn to the book's Part V on Buddhism's introduction to Tibet and its flourishing in that land.
But many of us, interested in the precise details and mysterious enigmas of the formative period of Tantric (Vajrayana) Buddhism as it arose in India, will find Snellgrove's very long Part III on the rise and complex development of Vajrayana to be SUPERLATIVE--probably the best overall treatment of this multi-faceted topic in the English language. (Note: Part III is pp. 117-303 in the Shambhala 2002 revised, single-volume edition, and so, at over 180 pages, not including many other references to tantra elsewhere, and maps, footnotes [so much easier to read than endnotes!], etc., represents a book-length treatise on just this one topic.)
Snellgrove knows **many** of the few dozen most important of the early, middle, and late Buddhist tantras in their original languages, and offers lengthy quotes from the most relevant passages in each of these tantras to illustrate or back up a point he is making in his text. He is, truly, one of the world's experts on Buddhist tantra, and explores interesting themes and discrepancies I've not seen with any other writers on the topic, even the prodigious Alex Wayman (not to mention younger writers like Thurman, Hopkins, et al.).
Moreover, he brings a candor to the topics at hand, showing how the Buddhist tantras diverge on important topics, such as the specific Deities in the 3- and 5- and 6-Buddha families, and on the controversies over whether sexual yoga and the offering of "foul" sacramental ingredients are to be literally enacted or performed only symbolically. He also demolishes the later Tibetan idea that any of these tantras can really be hierarchically ordered according the the well-known (but dubiously based) "four classes" (Action Class, Performance Class, Yoga Class, and Highest Yoga Class tantras).
I could go on and on about this wonderful Part III, which is so filled with delightful surprises and riveting insights. If one has ANY interest in Buddhist tantra and likes a writer who doesn't "dumb down" his subject matter but goes into the rich details on a wide array of topics connected with tantra, then just this Part III alone is worth the price of the book.
But then one also gets with this book all its other parts, such as Part IV's information-rich treatment of Buddhism as it developed in Central Asia and Nepal, and Part V on the schools of Buddhism in Tibet.
Get the book and learn something from an expert (and non-apologist) about the crucial set of developments in Indo-Tibetan Buddhism.
Good Reference Book on Tibetan BuddhismReview Date: 2004-05-30
This book has also been referred to and cited by many other scholars and is a respected authority in this area.

Used price: $92.35

Many authors, lots of photos...Review Date: 2007-06-03
From the front matter:
Editors: John H. McGlynn, Oscar Motuloh, Suzanne Charlé, Jeffrey Hadler, Bambang Bujono, Margaret
Glade-Agusta and Gedsiri Suhartono.
Other contributions: A.H. Nasution, Ajip Rosidi, Arief Budiman, Arswendo Atmowiloto, Asmara Nababan,
Benny Subianto, Chris Siner Key Timu, David Bouchier, Douglas Ramage, Emmy Hafild, Eros Djarot,
Feisal Ismail, Gerry van Klinken, H.S. Dillon, Hardoyo, Hermawan Sulistyo, Ignas Kleden, J.
Soedradjad Djiwandono, J.R.G. Jopari, João M. Saldanha, Joseph Adi Prasetyo, Joshua Barker, Jusuf
Wanandi, Juwono Sudarsono, Kartomo Mohamad, Kay Rala Xanana Gusmão, Loren Ryter, Miriam Budiardjo,
Moerdiono, Mohamad Sadli, Ong Hokham, Pramoedya Ananta Toer, Putu Suasta, R.B. Soehartono, Ridwan
Saidi, Sabam Sirait, Saskia Wieringa, Sidney Jones, Sri Soemantri, Tinuk Yampolsky, Ulil
Abshar-Abdallah, Yusuf Hasyim.
With an introduction by Taufik Abdullah, a preface by Goenawan Mohamad and a foreword by President
Jimmy Carter.
Oversized book and plenty of text and illustrations for your money.
Memory as plot...Review Date: 2007-07-30
Used price: $0.07

Insight Guide BaliReview Date: 2000-04-01
Great travel guideReview Date: 2001-07-08

Used price: $2.78

VivekanandaReview Date: 2001-07-26
Spiritual talks for sadhakasReview Date: 2000-07-05
The talks are spiriutally very deep going, but not systematic at all. They are based on hinduism but use christian und buddhist terminology, as well. The book is very helpful if one practices hinduism. If one does not do so, the book would be rather meaningless, because the sayings were meant for close disciples, who knew what he meant and what it was all about.
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