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Bones of the Master: A Journey to Secret…
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Bones of the Master: A Journey to Secret Mongolia (édition 2001)

par George Crane (Auteur)

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315882,943 (3.82)10
Bones of the Master is both a thrilling adventure story and a fascinating spiritual journey, played out against the epic sweep of Chinese history, and gives us a unique insight into a lost mystical tradition. Inner Mongolia, 1959. A young monk makes a miraculous escape from the Red Guards who have destroyed his monastery and murdered his fellow monks. He flees over three thousand miles to Hong Kong carrying with him only five books of poetry and his monk's certificate, both of which would had meant certain death had they been discovered. His mission is to escape the Cultural Revolution and continue the teachings of his Ch'an Buddhist master, Shuih Deng. Woodstock, New York, 1994. Tsung Tsai, now an old master himself, leaves his Woodstock cabin to travel with his friend George Crane back to Mongolia in search of the bones of his master - to rebury Shuih Deng with the proper Buddhist ceremonies - and to lay the foundation of a new monastery in a China that is rediscovering its spiritual roots.Tsung Tsai says, 'I am a Chinese Buddhist monk. That is enough'. But he is much more than that - Tsung Tsai is one of those rare individuals whose life straddles two worlds: the past and the present, the East and the West, the old China and the new. He is a living link to a millennia-old tradition that forty years of Maoist repression almost extinguished.… (plus d'informations)
Membre:hatzemach
Titre:Bones of the Master: A Journey to Secret Mongolia
Auteurs:George Crane (Auteur)
Info:Bantam (2001), 320 pages
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Bones of the Master: A Journey to Secret Mongolia par George Crane

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» Voir aussi les 10 mentions

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Beautifully written; sentences of joy and adventure. What I liked most, though, was the story of two very different men learning to trust one another. Maybe's it's "believe in one another". I appreciated, too, the reflection this book inspired on what it means to practice, in a Zen sense. (Spoiler alert) The final showdown between Power-Money-Sex and Pure Zen leaves me thinking that this story is multi-layered and to be continued, but perhaps not in this lifetime.



( )
  MaryHeleneMele | May 6, 2019 |
Los huesos del maestro un viaje fascinante al corazón de China

Un viaje fascinante al corazón de China
  URBEZCALVO | Feb 23, 2018 |
An alright read, quick. Crane's voice and personality gets annoying fast. And his poetry is rubbish. However, he keeps the book interesting and relevant through the innumerable dialogues which almost perfectly capture the essence of Tsung Tsai.
  sanrak | May 8, 2013 |
An exciting story, a wise monk, and (sort of) the education of the writer/narrator as he accompanies his ch'an teacher on a return to Inner Mongolia decades after he fled Chinese persecution. This is a stirring adventure story heightened by poetry, a tale of personal growth, and Buddhist teaching. ( )
  nmele | Apr 6, 2013 |
The Woodstock author befriends his neighbor and fellow poet, Tsung Tsia, an elderly Ch'an (Chinese Zen) monk who fled Mongolia in 1959. Together they travel to Mongolia in 1996 to locate the burial place of Tsung Tsia's teacher, Shiuh Deng. Tsung Tsia's irrepressible optimism conflicts with Georgie's sarcasm and nihilism as they climb the mountain to the teacher's cave. ( )
  bordercollie | Mar 18, 2009 |
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Bones of the Master is both a thrilling adventure story and a fascinating spiritual journey, played out against the epic sweep of Chinese history, and gives us a unique insight into a lost mystical tradition. Inner Mongolia, 1959. A young monk makes a miraculous escape from the Red Guards who have destroyed his monastery and murdered his fellow monks. He flees over three thousand miles to Hong Kong carrying with him only five books of poetry and his monk's certificate, both of which would had meant certain death had they been discovered. His mission is to escape the Cultural Revolution and continue the teachings of his Ch'an Buddhist master, Shuih Deng. Woodstock, New York, 1994. Tsung Tsai, now an old master himself, leaves his Woodstock cabin to travel with his friend George Crane back to Mongolia in search of the bones of his master - to rebury Shuih Deng with the proper Buddhist ceremonies - and to lay the foundation of a new monastery in a China that is rediscovering its spiritual roots.Tsung Tsai says, 'I am a Chinese Buddhist monk. That is enough'. But he is much more than that - Tsung Tsai is one of those rare individuals whose life straddles two worlds: the past and the present, the East and the West, the old China and the new. He is a living link to a millennia-old tradition that forty years of Maoist repression almost extinguished.

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