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The Best Spiritual Writing 2000 (Best American Spiritual Writing) [Paperback]

Philip Zaleski (Author), Thomas Moore (Introduction)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Book Description

Best American Spiritual Writing September 19, 2000

Each year, this bestselling series offers stunning new insight on what we hold sacred. In this inspiring collection of the year's most distinguished literary voices--some familiar, some just emerging--editor Philip Zaleski brings together a rich array of essays and poems about faith, prayer, love, and divinity. Representing a wid spectrum of religious traditions, these writers speak from the soul about both the most profound and the everyday aspects of spirituality in our lives.

In this moving collection of the everyday and the eternal, you'll find:

John Updike * Annie Dillard * Pico Iyer
Gretel Ehrlich * William Gass * Philip Levine

The Best Spiritual Writing 2000 is a surprising, provacative look at what we trust, what we long for, and what we believe.



Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

This third installment in Philip Zaleski's The Best Spiritual Writing series continues to live up to its admirers' expectations. What makes spiritual writing stand up and deliver is not exotic epiphanies in reclusive settings or the recounting of ecstatic communions. The real litmus test is how the narrator can take a flesh-and-bones life story and craft it into something that has spiritual meaning for the collective. "For myself I trust the path through the daily muck much more than the route that goes around it or above it or passes through it like an angel gliding transparently through a solid door," explains Thomas Moore in his Introduction (which, incidentally, warrants inclusion in The Best Spiritual Writing award in and of itself).

Year after year, this series becomes more solid and trustworthy--like a spiritual teacher who always has something age-old to offer in contemporary language. Ann Hood goes in "Search of Miracles" to heal her father of cancer and discovers the true meaning of miracles. In sparse, clean writing Natalie Goldberg tells the story of traveling to Japan to pay homage to her deceased Zen teacher. Jacques Lusseyran speaks from a blind man's perspective, helping us to see the light within instead of always relying on the light beyond. Other contributors include Linda Hogan, John Updike, Annie Dillard, Bill McKibben, and Mary Gordon. --Gail Hudson

From Publishers Weekly

This anthology easily lives up to the high standards set by the 1998 and 1999 editions, featuring essays, poems and a few genre-defying pieces that were originally published not only in religious periodicals, but also in literary journals and magazines such as Atlantic Monthly and Salon. While the spiritual orientations of the writers vary widely, certain unifying themes, such as death and a love of the outdoors, emerge. Christopher Bamford's "In the Presence of Death," James Van Tholen's "Surprised by Death," Ann Hood's "In Search of Miracles" and Richard John Neuhaus's "Born Toward Dying" all examine the spiritual transformation that terminal illness yields for the dying and those who love them. Deborah Gorlin's "Twice Woods Hebrew," Linda Hogan's "The Great Without," Robert Reese's "Rivers and Mountains" and Marjorie Sandor's "Waiting for a Miracle: A Jew Goes Fishing" are just a few that consider spiritual images and lessons found in nature. The book's timely preoccupation with these physical realities taps into a contemporary desire among evangelicals and Buddhists alike (both of whom are well represented in this book, along with Catholics, liberal Christians, Jews and skeptics) to elicit spiritual insights from everyday experiences and to understand the mind-body-spirit connection. Many essays amuse while they instruct particularly Mary Gordon's "Prayers" and Harvey Cox's "The Market as God"Dwhile others evoke tears (see not only the essays on death but also Jim Schley's "Devotional"). All of the contributions challenge assumptions and encourage new ways of seeing, thereby feeding the spirit. (Oct.)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 354 pages
  • Publisher: HarperSanFrancisco (September 19, 2000)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0062516701
  • ISBN-13: 978-0062516701
  • Product Dimensions: 8 x 5.9 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 12 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,025,861 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

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30 of 30 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Good soul food., November 11, 2000
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This review is from: The Best Spiritual Writing 2000 (Best American Spiritual Writing) (Paperback)
In his Preface to this collection of forty essays and poems, Zaleski writes, "we see that certain themes remain constant" in the Best Spritual Writing series, "as if hard-wired into the soul: the struggle with evil; the quest for God; nature as the ophany; the sense that we inhabit two worlds, one divine, the other human--all too human" (p. xvi). Although I found his five-star, 1999 collection more compelling overall, the contributions here both stir the soul and move the mind. Or, in the words of Thomas Moore's Introduction, these writings "should help us get through life rather than above or around it, . . . should turn us inside out, peeling back our skin of literalism, and remind us to hear the divine and angelic music that sounds through in any good piece of writing" (p. xviii).

This collection takes us on spiritual journeys both literally and figuratively. With her "rucksack on a cold March morning," Gretel Ehrlich follows the 800-year-old footsteps of St. Francis, "wanderer, seeker, ultimately saint" (p. 101). On her pilgrimage, she discovers "walking and giving, walking and singing, walking and praying: the path was a proving ground for sainthood, and walking was ambulation for heart and mind" (p. 107). We also travel with Natalie Goldberg to Kitada, Japan, where she visits the grave of her Zen teacher, Katagiri Roshiin a downpour. She writes, "I prostrate three times on the wet earth and I kneel in front of his stone. Pushing the dripping hair from my face, the rain running down my cheeks, I speak to my teacher: 'I am here. It took me a while, but I made it'" (p.139).

Through the death of his wife, Christopher Bamford discovers the meaning of life, that "each person's life is a spiritual journey" (p. 8), and that "time, each moment" is" a gift, a grace" (p. 4). Anita Mathias learns that "domesticity, marriage, and motherhood are smiths in which the soul can be forged as painfully, as beautifully, as amid the splendid virginal solitudes of the convent" (p. 218). In the most humourous essay in the book, John Price describes his near-death experience with a pheasant while driving through Iowa. "It made me wake up, become more observant of what's lurking in the margins," he writes. "What's lurking there, despite the rumors, is the possibility of surprise, of accident, of death. And if it's possible in this over determined landscape for a pheasant to kill a man, then why not, too, the possibility of restoration, renewal, and, at last, hope?" (p. 264).

I was pleased to find several of my favorite writers here, and discovered a few new writers I am eager to read beyond this anthology. While Wendell Berry questions "the hopeless paradox of making peace by making war"(p. 37), Annie Dillard finds "sparks of holiness" in the depths of "our bleak world" (p. 86). In her essay (excerpted from her excellent book, FOR THE TIME BEING), she observes, God "does not give as the world gives; he leads invisibly over many years, or he wallops for 30 seconds at a time. He may touch a mind, too, making a loud sound, or a mind may feel the rim of his mind as he nears" (pp. 96-7). Linda Hogan writes that the cure for "soul sickness" is "not in books. It is written in the bark of a tree, in the moonlit silence of night, in the bank of a river and the water's motion" (p. 153). Bill McKibben compares the secret of Gandhi's life, "renounce and enjoy" (p. 225), to the spread of the voluntary simplicity movement. "Here is the secret reason," he writes, "that some people in the rich world have begun to get rid of some of their stuff, move to smaller houses, eat lower on the food chain, ride bikes, reduce their expenses and scale back their careers: if you can simplify your life, and it requires a certain minimal affluence to do so, then you can have more fun than your neighbors" (p. 232).

I have rated this collection with four stars only when measured against Zaleski's five-star BEST SPIRITUAL WRITING, 1999. However, it is likely other readers will give this book their five-star approval. It may interest some readers that Zaleski also includes a list of the 100 best spiritual books of the century in this volume.

G. Merritt
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A BEAUTIFULLY CRAFTED COLLECTION, January 30, 2001
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Dorothy Weiss (ORLANDO, FLORIDA United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: The Best Spiritual Writing 2000 (Best American Spiritual Writing) (Paperback)
This is a beautifully crafted collection of spiritual writing, comparable to looking at a finely woven piece of sacred tapestry. Writers Kimberly Snow, "Rearranging the Clouds", John Updike, "Religious Consolation", James Van Tholen, "Surprised by Death", Jacques Lusseyran, "What One Sees Without Eyes", Natalie Goldberg, "The Rain and the Temple", and Ann Hood, "In Search of Miracles", are among those selected by Philip Zaleski and a panel of distinguished writers and thinkers to perpetuate this ongoing series of books honoring great spiritual writers. The aim of the 2000 series was to capture the spiritual pulse of this century, not of the earlier ones. More than two hundred books were nominated by the panel. This collection represents a wide spectrum of religious traditions. I liked that it embraced the everyday aspects of spirituality in our lives. Highly recommended reading! Hopefully, the 2001 series will include James Davis, "Rosetta Stone of God", Philip Morimitsu, "The Seeker", or Harold Klemp, "Child In The Wilderness".These three authors offer similar stunning insights and soul searing reminders of our ability to connect with Divine Spirit daily.
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