I’ve been fascinated by China from a young age, and I have always wanted to go there. In my thirties, after walking into a Daoist temple in Australia, I immediately felt at home. I was initiated into the Daoist tradition, then travelled to China. I spent nearly two decades living and travelling through the country. I married a Chinese national and felt I had married not just a person but a whole family! This propelled me into a deeper understanding of the culture. The books I’ve listed helped me to understand more: I hope you enjoy them too!
Eva Wong manages to make her tales so captivating that I couldn’t put this book down. I learnt about “the dynamic spiritual tradition” of Taoism/Daoism through hermits, revolutionaries, scholars, and mystics in her beautifully told account.
Reading this book, I felt like I was travelling with Eva from the East China sea to the heights of Mt Tai, from north of the Yangtze to the fields of Sichuan, meeting immortals, Daoist cultivators, writers and alchemists as the author made obscure theories and ancient scriptures eminently understandable through her story-telling style.
She brings the soul of China to life through its legends and tales, all firmly placed in their historic context. Famous Daoist figures and semi-mythical emperors all come to life as she crisscrosses China, spatially and temporally.
Here, Taoist practitioner Eva Wong offers a colorful treatment of the history and evolution of Taoism, told through traditional teaching tales. These tales, which Wong first heard as a child growing up in Hong Kong, are gleaned from the local storytellers and the uncensored chronicles known as yeshi—the wild history of China, not monitored by the official imperial scholars and historians. The stories are by turns mysterious and intriguing, passionate and violent, and they are peppered with colorful characters, including hermits, politicians, social activists, revolutionaries, scholars, scientists, and mystics.
Arranged chronologically from prehistory through the early twentieth century, these stories…
I love this translation of a long boat trip up the Yangtze River. Phillip Watson’s interpretation makes the journey seem alive, as if you had just finished sailing upriver with Lu You.
Photographs of modern-day places where the Song dynasty poet travelled bring his adventures to life, as he stops at temples and meets Daoist abbots and Buddhist monks. The river itself hasn’t changed much, making the book a reliable travel companion and guide.
I smiled, and sometimes laughed at loud, at the comments Lu You made about people and small shrines he encountered! And the photographs! Did I mention them? They make a translated journal from a thousand years ago seem like they happened just yesterday, capturing the essence of China in poetry and lyrical description.
In July 1170, a Chinese poet, politician and historian made a journey from west to east China. Lu You (pronounced 'loo yo') kept a daily record of his experiences: the people he met, the unfolding landscape and the famous historical sites he visited. What emerges is a detailed panorama of twelfth-century China, an exotic mixture of travelogue, literature and politics. This new modern translation by Philip Watson of the whole of the diary makes the entirety of this fascinating work of literature accessible to the general reader for the first time, and his detailed commentary fills in all the essential…
Daoism is China’s only indigenous religion and is essential to understanding the soul of China. I devoured this easy-to-read book because it is both comprehensive and deeply authentic. I found the format easy to navigate, with handy overviews of each chapter, subheadings, and highlighted areas of interest.
With so many misunderstandings and common myths about Daoism circulating, it was great to find an accurate accounting of this ancient religion. Komjathy’s credentials are both academic and experiential: He is a professor of Theology and Religious Studies and an ordained Daoist.
The handy, detailed map at the beginning allowed me to pinpoint the areas where the various schools, lineages, foundational views, and practices of Daoism had developed, and the comprehensive notes provide depth and context.
Using a historical, textual and ethnographic approach, this is the most comprehensive presentation of Daoism to date. In addition to revealing the historical contours and primary concerns of Chinese Daoists and Daoist communities, The Daoist Tradition provides an account of key themes and defining characteristics of Daoist religiosity, revealing Daoism to be a living and lived religion. Exploring Daoism from a comparative religious studies perspective, this book gives the reader a deeper understanding of religious traditions more broadly. Beginning with an overview of Daoist history, The Daoist Tradition then covers key elements of Daoist worldviews and major Daoist practices. This…
How does someone capture such a complex and ancient civilization in such a short book? Linda Jaivin makes it seem easy!
Her book traverses millennia, yet manages to highlight all of the key elements, events, and important characters in an entertaining style. As Jaivin is a prolific writer of all things China, in both fiction and non-fiction, I trusted her to get to the heart of the country in her minimalized, yet very thorough account.
I was particularly thrilled to see Jaivin highlight women in Chinese history, as she travelled through time to find the key markers of this ancient civilization. From ancient wall-builders to Boxers and Wolf Warriors, Laozi and Confucius to the Monkey King and Lu Xun, this book’s journey covers vast expanses of China’s heartlands in a highly entertaining fashion.
Journey across epic China―through millennia of early innovation to modern dominance. The Shortest History books deliver thousands of years of history in one riveting, fast-paced read.
As we enter the “Asian century,” China demands our attention for being an economic powerhouse, a beacon of rapid modernization, and an assertive geopolitical player. To understand the nation behind the headlines, we must take in its vibrant, tumultuous past―a story of “larger-than-life characters, philosophical arguments and political intrigues, military conflicts and social upheavals, artistic invention and technological innovation.”
The Shortest History of China charts a path from China's tribal origins through its storied…
I was so thrilled to discover this new, 2024 translation of Xu Xiake’s Travels.
Xu Xiake was a Ming dynasty traveller who walked across China with the goal of visiting the five sacred mountains. So happy to finally have an English translation of this richly described travel journey, wherein Xu climbed sacred mountains and engaged in discussions with Daoists, locals, officials, and other writers along the way.
Xu Xiake’s Travels is more than just a geographical account; it “is a window into the soul of a nation,” according to the book’s blurb. I concur. It’s a fascinating account made all the richer to me as I discovered this translation after my travels were over, and found, by chance, I had echoed his footsteps into the mountains.
In the annals of travel literature, few works possess the enduring allure and profound cultural significance as "Xu Xiake's Travels." Written by the famed Chinese explorer Xu Xiake during the Ming Dynasty, this masterpiece stands as a testament to human curiosity, resilience, and the relentless pursuit of knowledge.As one delves into the pages of this timeless chronicle, they embark on a journey across the vast tapestry of China's landscape, traversing mountains, rivers, and valleys. Through Xu Xiake's meticulous observations and vivid descriptions, readers are transported to a bygone era, where the wonders of nature unfold before their eyes with unparalleled…
Into the Mountains follows one woman’s journey exploring Daoist culture in the sacred peaks of China. From participating in historic rituals in Beijing’s Baiyun Guan as part of Hong Kong’s Qingsong group of temples, to climbing Mt Tai and meeting mountain monks and nuns, Debra Liu explores the beliefs and practices of Daoism in a travel format.
Myth and legend are taken as guideposts for discovery, as history comes alive in the journey up sacred peaks. Ancient sages, sacred texts, and modern-day pilgrims are all to be found in the mountains, while dragons, phoenixes, and qilin appear in fabulous tales. The extensive history of Daoism is linked firmly with modern-day practice in this authentic account of an ancient tradition.