From Publishers Weekly
Starred Review. This is a brilliant pairing of writer and subject. Iyer has known the Dalai Lama, spiritual and political leader of Tibet, for more than 30 years, thanks to a long-ago connection between the writer's father, an Oxford don born in India, and a young Dalai Lama. And so the acute global observer Iyer, a travel writer, essayist and novelist, has long followed the fortunes of the astute globalist Tibetan Buddhist, who travels the world but can never go home to his Chinese-occupied country. This is not a biography but an extended journalistic analysis of someone deep enough for several lifetimes, as Tibetan Buddhists believe. Iyer organizes his observations by smart descriptions of aspects of the Dalai Lama's work and character: icon, monk, philosopher, politician. This allows him to plumb different sides of His Holiness, whom he demythologizes even as he expresses a clear-eyed respect for the leader's achievements. Iyer reminds readers of paradoxes: the Dalai Lama is highly empirical, yet holds beliefs such as reincarnation that defy observation. He is a public figure who is diligent about elaborate and private religious practices. Like its subject, the aim of this book is ultimately simple: behold the man.
(Apr. 3) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Review
“A trenchant, impassioned look at a singular life”
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The New York Times Book Review“[An] elegant and intensely personal book...
The Open Road intermittently showcases Iyer's distinctive strength, his vivid travel writing.... The Dalai Lama,
The Open Road acknowledges, doesn't have all the answers; ‘it's the questions he puts into play that invigorate.’ One could say the same about Pico Iyer's marvelous little book.”
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The Washington Post“The Open Road, Pico Iyer's beautifully written, up-close meditation about [the Dalai Lama] - a superb portrait of a celebrated figure whom the master journalist and his family have known personally for 30 years - arrives at a perfect time. As the International Campaign for Tibet tries to get news out about what's happening in Tibet despite severe Chinese censorship - some unofficial reports speak of Lhasa in flames, with far more killing than official Chinese media acknowledge -
The Open Road provides context for the tragic events of this month and illuminates how a singular personality born to a highly ritualized leadership role has evolved over time…We're in the hands of a writer who completely understands his subject.”
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The Philadelphia Inquirer“The bracing virtue of Iyer’s thoughtful essay is that it allows us to imagine the Dalai Lama as something of an intellectual and spiritual adventurer, exploring fresh sources of individual identity and belonging in the newly united world.”
–Pankaj Mishra,
The New Yorker“[Iyer has] an access and insight into the Dalai Lama that lifts his writing above the clichés that normally surround him…
The Open Road is not a biography but it probably reveals more about its subject than any formal study.”
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The Economist“An incisive analysis of the mod...
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