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The Best Spiritual Writing 1998
 
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The Best Spiritual Writing 1998 [Paperback]

Philip Zaleski (Editor), Patricia Hampl (Introduction)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Book Description

Best Spiritual Writing November 4, 1998
The #1 Independent Bestseller in Paperback

This extraordinary volume brings together articles, poems, and essays from some of today's most distinguished writers covering the full spectrum of spiritual traditions.

Editor Philip Zaleski has selected richly diverse writings from such respected writers as Reynolds Price, Francine Prose, Madeleine L'Engle, Gretel Ehrlich, Nancy Mairs, Rick Bass, Noelle Oxenhandler, Cynthia Ozick, and Huston Smith, as well as several fresh new voices reflecting on prayer, meditation, nature, Dharma, Mass, silence, and much more. With an introduction by Patricia Hampl, this inspiring and thought-provoking collection includes:

Anne Lamott's delightful explanation of "Why I Don't Meditate"

Why do we pray? Because it works, suggests Rick Moody in his compelling essay, "Why I Pray"

A dramatic encounter between woman and dog in Natalie Goldberg's "Dog Bite Enlightenment"

Andre Dubus on the pleasures and surprises of Mass at his local church in "Love in the Morning"

Thomas Moore on nature as a spiritual presence in "Mystic Clouds and Natural Spirituality"

Barry Lopez on the sins of the world in "God's Love on a Darkling Plain"

Joseph Bruchac's "Call Me Ishi," a powerful poem evoking the riches of the Native American spiritual tradition

Rick Fields's funny and wise "Very Short Sutra on the Meeting of the Buddha and the Goddess"

The first ever anthology of the past year's best spiritual writing culled from print, electronic media, and original contributions from the authors themselves, this vital collection offers fresh insight into our religious traditions and responses to our perennial questions.



Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

What makes this anthology of essays and poems especially welcome and refreshing is its contemporary spiritual context. When Leonie Caldicott writes about the deaths of Princess Diana, Mother Teresa, and Dr. Victor Frankl (author of Man's Search for Meaning) all in the early weeks of the fall of 1997, she makes the spiritual links that many longed for at the time but were too numbed by media hype and grief to comprehend. Francine Prose writes about witnessing her father's spiritual integrity as a pathologist in the old morgue of Bellevue Hospital while handling the dead victims of AIDS. Simultaneously, this is an anthology that promises a lengthy shelf life. Natalie Goldberg's Buddhist insights after being severely bitten by a dog in France offer timeless gems of compassion and self-deprecating humor. And Madeleine L'Engle's never-before-published essay, "Into Your Hands Lord I Commend My Spirit," reads like a nightly Christian prayer. The anthology's editor Philip Zaleski (senior editor of Parabola magazine) has obviously taken painstaking effort to select the finest and the freshest that the year 1998 had to offer. --Gail Hudson

From Publishers Weekly

In her introduction, essayist Hampl aptly characterizes both our age and the need for this anthology: "We are a people who cannot get enough of self-help books (the sermon literature of our day), of meditation guides, accounts of spiritual journeys, and spiritual autobiographies." Zaleski (Gifts of the Spirit) satisfies the appetite for sustenance in this smorgasbord of tantalizing spiritual morsels. Collected here are 38 essays and poems drawn from 23 different periodicals, as well as some pieces published here for the first time (including Madeleine L'Engle's paean to God's power and love, "Into Your Hands, O Lord, I Commend My Spirit"). Selections represent spiritual traditions ranging from Judaism and Christianity to Buddhism and Hinduism. While many of the writings arise from a writer's deep involvement with a particular religious tradition, some essays, like Rick Bass's "The Heart of a Forest," and Reynolds Price's poem, "A Long and Sizable Farewell," teach us eloquently that the spiritual inhabits our quotidian world and imbues it with meaning. The anthology contains a "who's who" of modern writers, ranging from novelist and essayist Andre Dubus and essayist Joseph Epstein to novelists Gretel Ehrlich and Cynthia Ozick. The book includes a list of "Notable Spiritual Writing of 1997." Zaleski's keen eye for high-quality spiritual writing makes this a significant addition to the spiritual literature of our time.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 352 pages
  • Publisher: HarperOne (November 4, 1998)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0062515667
  • ISBN-13: 978-0062515667
  • Product Dimensions: 7.9 x 5.2 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 9.6 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,529,510 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

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Average Customer Review
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83 of 85 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Find LIFE ABUNDANT in these Slice-of-Life Tales!, March 8, 1999
This review is from: The Best Spiritual Writing 1998 (Paperback)
Philip Zaleski has done a masterful job of seeking out and commending the work of some eighty writers who live for "making sentences," as Joseph Epstein confesses. And because they do, they tell with great beauty of the particular struggles and joys which have brought them along a spiritual path. Some of these writers make us comfortable, some disturb. The reading becomes an opportunity to accept the challenges of the particular life I have chosen. In doing that, I, too, see a blessing within the day Today! Your heart will be softer and your mind more open after exposure to these adventurers. Where other spiritual writers offer us helpings of chicken soup, here is spread the finest of feasts. Paella for the literate soul! (Even if you're nearer the North Pole or a Zen Community than you imagined.)
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Another adventure for the soul., October 8, 2001
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"I think, that we need to detach ourselves from fashions and fads, that we should work with one eye on the earth and the other on heaven, that we must return regularly to silence" (p. xiv), editor Philip Zaleski writes in the Preface to this collection in The Best Spiritual Writing series, which he introduced in 1998. Although his latest edition lacks many of the compelling voices of previous years--Natalie Goldberg, Anne Lamott, Barry Lopez, Annie Dillard, and Philip Levine, for instance--Zaleski once again provides his reader with an adventure for the soul.

Based on his experience hearing the secrets of confession, Lorenzo Albacete, a Roman Catholic priest, observes that the "language of the inner life is a serene silence, a deep hurt, a boundless desire, and occasionally, a little laughter" (p. 3). In his "Sabbath" poem, Wendell Berry dreams "of a quiet man/ who explains nothing and defends nothing but only knows/ where the rarest wildflowers/ are blooming, and who goes/ where they are and stands still" (p. 16). In another memorable poem collected here, "Clear Night," Charles Wright wants "to be bruised by God" (p. 277), while gazing up at the stars. In his essay, "Bear Butte Diary," John Landretti introduces us to a shaman with an appreciation for coffee and cigarettes (p. 66). In perhaps the most moving essay here, "Stillbirth," Leah Kuncelik Lebec learns from the heart, through her seven-month-old stillborn baby, that God loves us all, "yes, loves us, all six billion--whatever--of us, teeming over the earth" (p. 104). Brian Doyle contemplates "grace" in "Grace Notes," and David James Duncan contemplates "strategic withdrawal" in his essay. While Thomas Moore examines the "in-between places" of transition that make life worth living (p. 184), Valerie Martin meditates upon Saint Francis, and Terry Tempest Williams ponders Saint Teresa in Spain, a place that looks much like her home in the American southwest: "Little excess. Nothing wasted" (p. 260). Joan D. Stamm considers "the way of flowers."

In short, this 277-page collection will not disappoint those readers interested in experiencing spiritual perspectives that have one eye on "the dusty world" and the other on heaven.

G. Merritt

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