Specify Based On Books The Magic Monastery: Analogical and Action Philosophy of the Middle East and Central Asia
Title | : | The Magic Monastery: Analogical and Action Philosophy of the Middle East and Central Asia |
Author | : | Idries Shah |
Book Format | : | Paperback |
Book Edition | : | First Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 208 pages |
Published | : | March 1st 1992 by Octagon Press, Limited (first published January 1st 1972) |
Categories | : | Spirituality. Religion. Islam |
Idries Shah
Paperback | Pages: 208 pages Rating: 4.57 | 123 Users | 22 Reviews
Interpretation Conducive To Books The Magic Monastery: Analogical and Action Philosophy of the Middle East and Central Asia
This intriguing book can be read on many levels. It’s a complete course in non-linear thinking combining traditional tales from written and oral sources from the East and original stories especially written by Shah. Delightful & unexpected, they reveal aspects of life that we typically overlook. Here’s a little taste: Here’s a little taste:Grain: The chicken had his wish, and was magically transformed into a fox. Then he found that he could not digest grain.
Success: A man went to a Sufi and said: ‘Teach me how to be successful.’ The Sufi said: ‘I will teach you more than that. I shall teach you to be generous to the unsuccessful. That will pave the way towards your own success, and give you far more. I shall also teach you how to be generous towards the successful; otherwise you will be liable to become bitter and unable to work towards success.’
Details Books During The Magic Monastery: Analogical and Action Philosophy of the Middle East and Central Asia
Original Title: | The Magic Monastery |
ISBN: | 0863040586 (ISBN13: 9780863040580) |
Edition Language: | English |
Rating Based On Books The Magic Monastery: Analogical and Action Philosophy of the Middle East and Central Asia
Ratings: 4.57 From 123 Users | 22 ReviewsNotice Based On Books The Magic Monastery: Analogical and Action Philosophy of the Middle East and Central Asia
Another of Shahs amazing collection of anecdotes, fables, stories and dialogues, encapsulating an ancient form of wisdom which is at once ineffable yet profound.The late Nobel prize-winning author Doris Lessing once wrote of this story form: A real teaching story, whether thousands of years old, or new, goes far beyond the parables that are still part of our culture. A parable has a simple message: this means that. But in a Sufi teaching story, there may be layers of meaning, some of them not toThe author and Sufi, Idries Shah, was a person that meant a lot to Doris Lessing. For me DL meant everything. Hers was a sane voice in an insane world, I thought, so that is how my life with the books of Idries Shah started. The first time I read this book was about 40 years ago. I remember how I got swept away and marveled at the magic in the first story, The Magic Monastery. It didn't remind me of anything I'd ever read before, as well as the story Where it Starts didn't. Both are wonderful
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Fun times from ancient Persia? I'm still trying to get my mind around where exactly these stories come from. But they're good.
A highly entertaining and absorbing book by Idries Shah. Full of stories, anecdotes, proverbs, quotations, and commentary this books is also designed to induce movement in the mind of the reader and promote new insights, in the tradition of Sufi materials. As always, Shah's lucid and precise prose and his ability to tell a story fully, but without any 'fat' shine through.
Is it possible to take the content of a monastery and transform the experience it aims to induce into a collection of glue paper and ink that fits inside a coat pocket? I don't know, do you?
Another in the uniformly attractive reissue by ISF of Shah's books, but uniformity is far from true of the content. The Magic Monastery is a collection of short stories, many traditional, but others created by Shah to, as the blurb tells us, complete the book as a 'course in non-linear thinking'. Everyone will have favourites of these, but mine is the story of the man and the snail. I often think of it, with a smile and complete sympathy for the snail's point of view. It's worth getting the book
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