Buddhaliography: 10 Most Gifted Buddhist Books

Ranked #11,775 in Books, Poetry & Writing, #430,109 overall

Many People Have Bought These Popular Buddhist Books as Gifts from Amazon

Ok, 10's just a made up number. Here are a few authors that you can not go wrong with: Dalai Lama, Pema Chodron, Shunryu Suzuki and Thich Nhat Hanh. These bestselling favorites have way more than just 10 books between them.

Books are always good. If I get one I don't want . . . well I just pass it on to someone who is slavering for the read.

Sometimes it's a book I'd never buy for myself. Surprise! Double surprise! Turns out I love it! The Brain is at odds with the Heart.

Amazon's Most Popular Buddhist Gift Books

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Who Needs Stuff?

Maybe don't need? Got to be kiddin' me. It's good stuff. Got to have it.
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Dalai Lama

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The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying

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The Art of Happiness: A Handbook for Living (Hardcover)

Have you ever wondered what it would be like to sit down with the Dalai Lama and really press him about life's persistent questions? Why are so many people unhappy? How can I abjure loneliness? How can we reduce conflict? Is romantic love true love? Why do we suffer? How should we deal with unfairness and anger? How do you handle the death of a loved one? These are the conundrums that psychiatrist Howard Cutler poses to the Dalai Lama during an extended period of interviews in The Art of Happiness: A Handbook for Living.
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Pema Chodron

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When Things Fall Apart

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When Things Fall Apart: Heart Advice for Difficult Times (Shambhala Library)

Much like Zen, Pema Chodron's interpretation of Tibetan Buddhism takes the form of a nontheistic spiritualism. In When Things Fall Apart this head of a Tibetan monastery in Canada outlines some relevant and deceptively profound terms of Tibetan Buddhism that are germane to modern issues. The key to all of these terms is accepting that in the final analysis, life is groundless. By letting go, we free ourselves to face fear and obstacles and offer ourselves unflinchingly to others. The graceful, conversational tone of Chodron's writing gives the impression of sitting on a pillow across from her, listening to her everyday examples of Buddhist wisdom.
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Taking the Leap

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Shunryu Suzuki

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Thich Nhat Hanh

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Mindfulness in Plain English

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Peace Is Every Step

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Past Pops

a select list

Some books are profound.
Some books are zany.
It's up to you to decide.
Affinity if quirky.

Wherever You Go, There You Are

Jon Kabat-Zinn

In his follow-up to Full Catastrophe Living--a book in which he presented basic meditation techniques as a way of reducing stress and healing from illness--here Jon Kabat-Zinn goes much more deeply into the practice of meditation for its own sake. To Kabat-Zinn, meditation is important because it brings about a state of "mindfulness," a condition of "being" rather than "doing" during which you pay attention to the moment rather than the past, the future, or the multitudinous distractions of modern life. In brief, rather poetic chapters, he describes different meditative practices and what they can do for the practitioner. The idea that meditation is "spiritual" is often confusing to people, Kabat-Zinn writes; he prefers to think of it as what you might call a workout for your consciousness. This book makes learning meditation remarkably easy (although practicing it is not). But it also makes it seem infinitely appealing. --Ben Kallen Amazon.com Review
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The Ultimate Happiness Prescription

Deepak Chopra

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Radical Acceptance

Tara Brach

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That Bird Has My Wings: The Autobiography of an Innocent Man on Death Row

Jarvis Jay Masters

Review
"In this polished tale that belies the author's raw origins, Masters, who has been imprisoned on San Quentin's death row since 1990 . . . recalls the neglect, abuse and cycle of crime and hopelessness that relegated him to prison by age 19." (Publishers Weekly )

A heartbreaking memoir; the brutal conditions of Masters's boyhood will be difficult for some readers to take, but his ultimate message of hope and reconciliation is moving and inspiring. Highly recommended. (Library Journal )

"A gripping indictment of poverty and the foster-care system." (Kirkus Reviews )

Jarvis Jay Masters was set on a dangerous course which eventually brought him to death row. Somehow, within those walls, he now demonstrates divine grace in his daily life and by the cautionary tale he shares within these pages. This amazing, wise man deserves our ear, and our support. (--Sister Helen Prejean, author of Dead Man Walking )

Jarvis Jay Masters' moving memoir provides an intimate portrait of the tragic racial inequality in our justice system, and testifies to the need for better education, greater training, and increased opportunity to keep these forgotten youth from ending up in our nation's juvenile centers and prisons. Read this book! (Van Jones, founder, The Ella Baker Center for Human Rights & Green for All, and author of Green Collar Economy )

"Masters' intelligent, incisive prose paints a compelling depiction of the horrors leading to his situation . . . Masters gives us much to think about." (Booklist )

"This brave account of a childhood ravaged by neglect, violence, and institutional indifference is remarkable for its utter lack of anger and bitterness. . . [Masters's] ultimate message of hope and reconciliation is moving and inspiring. Highly recommended." (Library Journal )

All across America, boys are lost to trauma and deprivation. Few of them have given voice to their experience and the redemptive power of spirituality as has Jarvis Jay Masters. (James Garbarino, Ph.D., author of Lost Boys: Why Our Sons Turn Violent and What We Can Do About It )

Masters' . . .ability to recognize, subdue and transform the self-destructive drive such life-denying forces promote is a lesson for us all. His time is now. His book is a testament to the human spirit." (Mike Farrell, chair of Death Penalty Focus and author of Just Call Me Mike:A Journey to Actor and Activist and From Mule to Man )

A real-life The Wire-heartbreaking and harrowing, impossible to put down. A miraculous accomplishment, That Bird Has My Wings captivates, instructs, and inspires as Masters shows how enlightenment can occur even in a place as grim as San Quentin Prison's death row. (David Sheff, author of Beautiful Boy )

Brave, heartbreaking, redemptive and wise. Jarvis Jay Masters has turned his life into remarkable good medicine. (Jack Kornfield, author of A Path with Heart )

Forthright about his own failings, Masters' truth has brought him reconciliation with his best self. His compelling memoir is a plea for reform, for a common humanity, and I share his hope that this moving story will redouble our efforts to make sure that every child matters. (Desmond Tutu )

Masters' intelligent, incisive prose paints a compelling depiction of the horrors leading to his situation. . . . while awaiting execution, Masters gives us much to think about. (Booklist )

Description
Jarvis Jay Masters has taken an extraordinary journey of faith. Strangely enough, his moment of enlightenment came behind the bars of San Quentin's death row. In this compelling memoir, inmate and author Jarvis Jay Masters takes us from the arms of his heroin-addicted mother to an abusive foster home, on his escape to the illusory freedom of the streets and through lonely nights spent in bus stations and juvenile homes, and finally to life inside the walls of San Quentin State Prison. Using the nub and filler from a ballpoint pen (the only writing instrument allowed him in solitary confinement), Masters chronicles the story of a bright boy who turns to a life of crime, and of a penitent man who embraces Buddhism to find hope in this ultimately inspirational story.

Masters has written his remarkable story as a cautionary tale for anyone who might be tempted to follow in his footsteps, and as a plea for under-standing to a world that too often ignores the plight of the forgotten members of society. His personal story dramatically reminds us all that freedom and opportunity are not to be taken for granted, and that no matter what their neighborhood, no matter what their race, every child matters.
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Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance

Robert M. Pirsig

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Zen Golf

Joseph Parent

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Osho Zen Tarot

Osho

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def. bud * dha * li * og * ra * phy

a Buddhist reference for your eye, ear and mind

Here's a few of the areas the project covers

  • Bibliographies of translators and Buddhist masters from all traditions.

  • Reading lists.

  • What people are currently reading.

  • Online resources for audio and video Dharma teachings.

  • Just for fun. Lists of fiction and movies that seem to be "practice related."


Check buddha-book.info for the ever evolving list of referenced items.

Sponsored by the itty-bitty Buddha Bookstore
new, used, out of print, first editions, signed and collectible books

CHOU CHAO'S ANNEX: Best Spiritual Books of the Century

Boss let Chao have his own spot for books. You look. You buy. Hope to get big fortune. Go to sunny dry clime. Drinks with umbrellas in. Saha world lookout. Got sights on you. For liberation purposes only . . . of course.

Check best books since the press at Chou Chao's Annex & future tiki hut. And maybe you buy?

Zen Stains: drinkin' & headed home

Chao Chou's Swampland Flowers

Chao Chou That's me. I'm the bookstore dog at the itty-bitty buddha bookstore The Boss says my name is a play on the koan where Zen master Chao Chou is asked if a dog has Buddha nature . . . he says no.

So here I be - nature that is no nature. Out in the marketplace buying, selling and scouting out hard to find books for people who need them.

When I'm slacking I find all sorts of interesting reads. I post the gems here. Sometimes some of my own dogger-roll will stain your screen.
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Chao-Chou

I'm the bookstore dog at the itty-bitty buddha bookstore The Boss says my name is a play on the koan where Zen master Chao Chou is asked if a dog has Buddha... more »

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