From Publishers Weekly
Who doesn't love a good flashback? Baby boomers in particular will enjoy this wry, hip, fast, breezy account by journalist and alternative radio newsman Nisker (Crazy Wisdom; Buddha's Nature). A Nebraska-born Jew, Nisker has practiced Buddhism for decades, but he could be also be a poster child for the multitude of religious and spiritual journeys through the American landscape. Anchored for many years in San Francisco with a long-running radio show, Nisker had the entree and opportunities to experience intensely the rolling panoply of American religion. Through a highly personalized lens he tracks, among other topics, the beat poets, hippies, global travel, Eastern meditation, New Age methods, scientific frontiers, eco-spirituality, men's spirituality, Gandhian economics and the current state of political affairs. From moving through the marijuana mist at the Monterey Pop Festival to viewing the neon "Om" sign at sunset at Swami Muktananda's Bombay ashram to conversing one-on-one with the Dalai Lama before he won the Nobel Peace Prize, Nisker seems to have been everywhere when something cool or significant was happening. The sweetness in his journey is in the optimism stamped throughout this passport to times gone by and times to come. This is a good read for anyone interested in pop culture, but for boomers who want to look in the rear view mirror for a clearer glimpse of what's ahead, Nisker's romp is a tender triumph.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Booklist
It might seem as though enough ink has been spent on parsing the boomer quest for enlightenment, but the story of the sixties and seventies is complex and significant, and Nisker adds both wit and wisdom to coverage of that heady time in a free-associative blend of vivid memoir and smart and spiky interpretation. A born outsider as the only Jewish kid in a small Nebraska town, Nisker begin his search for connection and meaning early, finding his way to Kerouac, Buddhism, India, and San Francisco, where he became a socially conscious radio newscaster with attitude and flair. Nisker's anecdotal account feels casual, but he actually delves deeply into the psychological and spiritual ramifications of the radical changes that have occurred on the boomer generation's watch, from the nuclear arms race to the shocking extinction rate of 27,000 species a year to global corporatism. What to make of it all? Nisker, a Buddhist whose previous books include
Crazy Wisdom (1998), finds that meditation and humor help put it all into perspective.
Donna SeamanCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
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