Dharma Library
A large collection of articles, from past issues of New Chan Forum and more besides.
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Book Review: Illumination by Rebecca Li
Jeremy Woodward |A Guide to the Buddhist Method of No-Method
This book feels familiar, like a homecoming, with its frequent references to Masters Sheng Yen, John Crook and Simon Child – Rebecca Li’s three teachers to whom she dedicates it. It is also simultaneously very challenging.
Rebecca’s background, born in Hong Kong and then studying in America while being the regular translator for Master Sheng Yen over…
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Allow Joy into our Hearts: Chan Practice in Uncertain Times
Hilary Richards |A Book by Rebecca Li
When faced with uncertainty that seems unbearable do you panic? Do you worry? Do you put things off? These are some of the all too human responses Rebecca Li discusses in her book Allow Joy into Our Hearts: Chan Practice in Uncertain Times. This delightful book is a series of essays written from recordings of talks Rebecca gave to her Zoom Chan Group in New Jersey at the…
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Book review: The Angel's Wound – Collected Haibun
Eddy Street |In this book George Marsh, one-time editor of this journal, presents a collection of haibun. Those familiar with the muse and process of haiku and haibun will know, however, that you do not collect them, they collect you. So here we have the assembled work of someone that has been collected through the experiences and activities of his life including those of a Buddhist practitioner.
For readers…
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Retreat Report – Silent Illumination July 2022
Anonymous |heatwave
only the butterflies
still busyI am a chatterer, verbalising everything in my head all the time, keeping a running commentary going and explaining events to some imaginary listener. It took me a while to realise on retreat that the ‘Silent’ in ‘Silent Illumination’ was not the silence of nature but had to be the silence of me.
I was strict with myself and cut down the flow of the wordy…
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Book Review: In Love with The World. What a Monk can Teach you About Living from Nearly Dying
Hilary Richards |Book by Yongey Mingyur Rinpoche with Helen Tworkov
A friend gave me a copy of this book when I was recovering after an operation. What a brilliant gift and what an engaging book! Far from being a stuffy Buddhist text, it is an adventure story, describing one man’s journey towards enlightenment, exploring the mind of pure awareness and finding himself in love with the world. The author, Yongey…
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No Guru, No Church, No Dependency
Susan Blackmore |Rushing off to begin a solitary retreat last month, I suddenly remembered that I wanted to check something in the liturgy so, in a hurry (yes, I know!!), I grabbed the first copy I could find and set off to my hut. Only later, once I’d settled down, did I take a look and realise that it was a very old copy indeed. To my surprise, there, on the front cover (see overleaf), is some writing in John’s…
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Books Review: Yarn; Sunshine and Shadow, by Hughie Carroll
Marion Partington |Hughie Carroll’s public début as a poet began on social media during the first national lockdown in May 2020. The variety of direct, colloquial, honest, and tender poems were immediately engaging: pared to the core and punchy. I joined with the many who encouraged what rapidly became two books of poetic memoir: Yarn and Sunshine and Shadow.
The early poems take us to the perilous edges of being…
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Unravelling – Anthology of the Redthread Haiku Sangha 1997–2019
Eddy Street |A Book review
Of the art forms that are associated with Zen the writing of haiku is the most accessible. Surely anyone can write a brief three-line verse which pointedly does not rhyme. But it is not as easy as that; it requires a motivation to express what is arising and a self at ease to allow the clarity of that expression. The Redthread Sangha is a group of Zen practitioners who between…
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Book Review: The World Could Be Otherwise by Norman Fischer
Jeremy Woodward |This book had been winking at me since the beginning of the year. For several years, Norman Fischer’s writing in Tricycle and elsewhere has been a source of pleasure to me. He writes lucidly and with a poet’s eye and phrase. Eventually, a couple of months after it was published, I gave in, bought this book, devoured it and then just reread it straight away. That’s rare for me.
Its subtitle,…
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Poem for John
Fiona Nuttall |Because of your military background and Sandhurst voice,
Because of your wild white eyebrows, as mobile as eels,
Because I knew you before I knew you,
Because you could see with your third eye,
Because you saw me and smiled,
Because you said, ‘Are you ready for an adventure?’
Because I felt heard and known,
Because of your delight in chocolate biscuits,
Because of the predictability of cauliflower cheese…
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