
Stock image for illustration purposes only - book cover, edition or condition may vary.
Description for Zen City
Paperback. From the author of "Breakfast with the Ones You Love" comes Zen City. Num Pages: 136 pages. BIC Classification: FL. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 204 x 217 x 17. Weight in Grams: 168.
The world of ZEN CITY is a world of passionate desires: the desire for power, the desire for order, and the desire for self-transcendence. ZEN CITY is a story about the struggle and violence of people who see themselves as striving for the ultimate. Along the way, ZEN CITY presents a sly critique of the practice and perversions of imported spirituality in twentieth-century America.
The world of ZEN CITY is a world of passionate desires: the desire for power, the desire for order, and the desire for self-transcendence. ZEN CITY is a story about the struggle and violence of people who see themselves as striving for the ultimate. Along the way, ZEN CITY presents a sly critique of the practice and perversions of imported spirituality in twentieth-century America.
Product Details
Publisher
John Hunt Publishing
Format
Paperback
Publication date
2016
Condition
New
Number of Pages
136
Place of Publication
Ropley, United Kingdom
ISBN
9781785353505
SKU
V9781785353505
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 15 to 20 working days
Ref
99-15
About Eliot Fintushel
Eliot Fintushel is a prolific science-fiction writer with scores of short stories, many of them anthologized in Best Of collections. His novel Breakfast With The Ones You Love is available from Random House. Eliot is also an award winning performance artist. He studied real Zen for many years, working on koans at the goad of the stick.
Reviews for Zen City
Publishers Weekly STARRED REVIEW June 2016:Author and performance artist Fintushel (Breakfast with the Ones You Love) blends Asian philosophy with science fiction in a mind-melting exploration of love, loss, and cultural appropriation. Like every other hick on the outside of the City, Big Man dreams of gaining access to it: a place of pure Buddha-nature, where every inhabitant has abandoned desire and reached a state of absolute oneness. Unable to enter by official channels, Big Man enlists the help of his would-be lover, Angela, to sneak in through a back way. In the process, he attracts the attention of the supposed bodhisattva No Mind and the less-than-holy Buddhist teacher Bobo Shin, who pursue him into the City for their own ends. Each character is fascinatingly developed in a somewhat Dadaist fashion, all while moving the plot along. Fintushel's goal is never to mock or deride Buddhism itself, but rather to expose the ways in which the Eightfold Path is corrupted by human nature; in that regard, this book succeeds brilliantly, deftly weaving a tragic romance that's about all of us, and none at all.