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154+ Works 3,034 Members 49 Reviews 8 Favorited

About the Author

Series

Works by Dōgen

The Wholehearted Way (1997) 149 copies, 5 reviews
Shobogenzo: Zen Essays by Dogen (1986) 139 copies, 1 review
Dogen's Extensive Record: A Translation of the Eihei Koroku (2004) — Author — 124 copies, 1 review
Beyond Thinking: A Guide to Zen Meditation (2004) 123 copies, 2 reviews
Enlightenment Unfolds (1999) — Author — 117 copies, 1 review
Treasury of the True Dharma Eye: Zen Master Dogen's Shobo Genzo (2013) — Author — 97 copies, 1 review
Zen Poetry of Dogen (1997) 60 copies, 1 review
Dogen's Genjo Koan: Three Commentaries (2011) 53 copies, 1 review
Record of Things Heard (2001) 38 copies
Le Trésor du Zen (1986) 18 copies, 1 review
Corps et esprit: La voie du zen (1998) 8 copies, 1 review
Poèmes zen de Maître Dôgen (2001) 5 copies, 1 review
Dogen Zen 4 copies
正法眼蔵随聞記 (2003) 3 copies
Shobogenzo (French Edition) (2009) 3 copies, 2 reviews
La Présence au monde (1999) 3 copies, 1 review
Who Is Dogen Zenji? (1998) 3 copies
Divenire l'essere (1997) 2 copies
Eihei Koroku I-V (2013) 2 copies
正法眼蔵(七) (2005) 2 copies
Uji (2002) 1 copy
正法眼藏 1 copy
正法眼蔵(三) (2004) 1 copy
正法眼蔵(一) (2004) 1 copy
Dōgen Zenji zenshū (1988) 1 copy
The Shushogi 1 copy
Poesía mística zen (2013) 1 copy
The Shobogenzo 1 copy, 1 review

Associated Works

Zen Poems (1999) — Contributor — 197 copies
Realizing Genjokoan: The Key to Dogen's Shobogenzo (2010) — Author — 126 copies, 2 reviews
Flowers Fall (1996) — Contributor, some editions — 97 copies
Sounds of Valley Streams (1988) — Contributor, some editions — 56 copies
Zen Texts (Bdk English Tripitaka Translation Series) (2006) — Author — 20 copies, 1 review

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Members

Reviews

52 reviews
This is a wonderful little book that deserves to be sipped rather than swallowed. Admittedly, this was my first exposure to Dogen but it was enough to inspire me to read more. At times the rigor of dedication this book demands for anyone seeking the Way exceeded my interests (leave everyone I know and strip myself down to a life of poverty and single-minded dedication to studying the Way? No thanks). That being said, there is much in Dogen's view to be contemplated and adapted so that a show more balanced life of American style Zen study can be at least imagined.

I definitely recommend this book but only to those already familiar with Zen meditation and an established practice.
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Review From LibraryThing:

Viewing Peach Blossoms and Realizing the Way

In spring wind
peach blossoms
begin to come apart.
Doubts do not grow
branches and leaves.

-pg 214

The amount of wisdom in this collection of writings by 13th Century Zen Master Dogen is devastating. I had to read the book very slowly, sometimes only a single page per day. The book is broken into five main parts after a brief but interesting introduction and biography of the man:

Part 1, Practical Instructions; Part 2, show more Philosophical Works; Part 3, Poetic Imagery; Part 4, Transmission of the teaching; and Part 5, Poems

The material here is rich. Particularly in the Philosophical Works section, I didn't feel any amount of intellectual foundation work could prepare me for Dogen Zenji's writings. Rather, steady and focused Zen practice seemed the only helpful context. That said, it seems a lifetime of practice could be spent contemplating his work. This stuff goes deep. No wonder we are still reading his work over 800 years later and still finding it shockingly relevant.

The translations in this book are outstanding. They make what are already pretty universal topics (present tense living?) even more relevant. One would never figure the age of these texts from the clear and concise language used in the translations.

All in all, I am very hesitant to recommend this book to anyone who hasn't had much exposure to Zen writing and thought. This would certainly be a challenging read for anyone with scant experience practicing Zen meditation. That said, the work here is so often beyond gorgeous that I would love to share it with anyone interested. Shunryu Suzuki may be a better place to start but students shouldn't wait too long to dive into Dogen. There is a lifetime of contemplation here; one should get started right away.
show less
Viewing Peach Blossoms and Realizing the Way

In spring wind
peach blossoms
begin to come apart.
Doubts do not grow
branches and leaves.

-pg 214

The amount of wisdom in this collection of writings by 13th Century Zen Master Dogen is devastating. I had to read the book very slowly, sometimes only a single page per day. The book is broken into five main parts after a brief but interesting introduction and biography of the man:

Part 1, Practical Instructions; Part 2, Philosophical Works; Part 3, Poetic show more Imagery; Part 4, Transmission of the teaching; and Part 5, Poems

The material here is rich. Particularly in the Philosophical Works section, I didn't feel any amount of intellectual foundation work could prepare me for Dogen Zenji's writings. Rather, steady and focused Zen practice seemed the only helpful context. That said, it seems a lifetime of practice could be spent contemplating his work. This stuff goes deep. No wonder we are still reading his work over 800 years later and still finding it shockingly relevant.

The translations in this book are outstanding. They make what are already pretty universal topics (present tense living?) even more relevant. One would never figure the age of these texts from the clear and concise language used in the translations.

All in all, I am very hesitant to recommend this book to anyone who hasn't had much exposure to Zen writing and thought. This would certainly be a challenging read for anyone with scant experience practicing Zen meditation. That said, the work here is so often beyond gorgeous that I would love to share it with anyone interested. Shunryu Suzuki may be a better place to start but students shouldn't wait too long to dive into Dogen. There is a lifetime of contemplation here; one should get started right away.
show less
Viewing Peach Blossoms and Realizing the Way

In spring wind
peach blossoms
begin to come apart.
Doubts do not grow
branches and leaves.

-pg 214

The amount of wisdom in this collection of writings by 13th Century Zen Master Dogen is devastating. I had to read the book very slowly, sometimes only a single page per day. The book is broken into five main parts after a brief but interesting introduction and biography of the man:

Part 1, Practical Instructions; Part 2, Philosophical Works; Part 3, Poetic show more Imagery; Part 4, Transmission of the teaching; and Part 5, Poems

The material here is rich. Particularly in the Philosophical Works section, I didn't feel any amount of intellectual foundation work could prepare me for Dogen Zenji's writings. Rather, steady and focused Zen practice seemed the only helpful context. That said, it seems a lifetime of practice could be spent contemplating his work. This stuff goes deep. No wonder we are still reading his work over 800 years later and still finding it shockingly relevant.

The translations in this book are outstanding. They make what are already pretty universal topics (present tense living?) even more relevant. One would never figure the age of these texts from the clear and concise language used in the translations.

All in all, I am very hesitant to recommend this book to anyone who hasn't had much exposure to Zen writing and thought. This would certainly be a challenging read for anyone with scant experience practicing Zen meditation. That said, the work here is so often beyond gorgeous that I would love to share it with anyone interested. Shunryu Suzuki may be a better place to start but students shouldn't wait too long to dive into Dogen. There is a lifetime of contemplation here; one should get started right away.
show less

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Statistics

Works
154
Also by
7
Members
3,034
Popularity
#8,413
Rating
4.2
Reviews
49
ISBNs
163
Languages
10
Favorited
8

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