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Women's Fiction
Sadhus: India's Mystic Holy Men

Sadhus: India's Mystic Holy Men

List Price: $19.95
Your Price: $13.57
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: awe inspiring for anyone seeking Spirit
Review: an india friend of mine loaned me his copy of "Sadhus" and after reading it I went and bought my own. But I gave that to my brother so now I've ordered another from Amazon. You can tell I like it. Thirty years ago I spent a year in India and saw some sadhus from time to time. This book captures my memories of sadhus. I was reminded of the different types of expression. Some are friendly, some silent and remote and others that are to strange to my mind for me to relate to. But they all look like they have the spiritual quest at heart. Thanks to the author for refreshing my memory.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: awe inspiring for anyone seeking Spirit
Review: an india friend of mine loaned me his copy of "Sadhus" and after reading it I went and bought my own. But I gave that to my brother so now I've ordered another from Amazon. You can tell I like it. Thirty years ago I spent a year in India and saw some sadhus from time to time. This book captures my memories of sadhus. I was reminded of the different types of expression. Some are friendly, some silent and remote and others that are to strange to my mind for me to relate to. But they all look like they have the spiritual quest at heart. Thanks to the author for refreshing my memory.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Offers an esoteric perspective of Hinduism.
Review: Cool color pictures, and intense documentation on the fascinating aspect of Hinduism that someone who's never been to India would have a hard time learning about. This is the India that non-Indians think of when they hear the term "India;" mysterious, forboding, and hard for the mind to think of for too long without profound bewilderment. Reccomend to anyone with even a mild interest in India or Hinduism, as is this is an integral part of her past, present, and undoubtedly, her future.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Culturally educative
Review: I went to India twice, the first time for 4 months, and sadhus are definetly one of the most interesting people of the hindu world. Obviously their lifestyle is not comprehended by westerners and even less by closed-minded people who probably have never been to another continent with a different culture (as reviewer fro Hawaii); or if they have, they still have'nt learned to respect the differences and traditions among different societies. Since my first trip to India I saw this book on many bookstores there, and after comparing it to many others this is the one with the best pictures of the holly men. Incomprehension should not be a cause of disrespect; actually, this has caused wars, and still does.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An Unassuming Study Of Human Devotion
Review: The men (and very occasionally women) portrayed in this inconspicuous volume are compelling in the extreme. It is only necessary to gaze at their faces and ash-dusted bodies to fully appreciate the gift of this work. But the author/photographer offers so much more.

As a study in psychology in extremis, the wealth of behavioral detail and description is satisfying. And the diverse, often incredibly imaginative, rituals of self-abnegation are conveyed with tremedous sensitivty and scrupulous balance.

The text is dense, and possibly impenetrable in places. It is academic in its emphasis on getting every possible relevant detail down. So one is met with an avalanche of esoterica upon delving in.

Perhaps the writing assumes a bit of knowlege and sophistication in Eastern ways? But it really doesn't matter anyway. Somehow a sense of what is important filters through after a while. And the photo captions are well-written and fascinating.

This is a picture of a society of devotees who have given it ALL up in order to stay exquisitely near to the timeless, pitiless cycle of death and regeneration that powers all life. The book itself is clearly an act of devotion to that extaordinay commitment.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A great book about total stupidity
Review: This is a beautiful book about a bunch of morons. The basic fallacy of this book is that the people written about in this book are "mystic holy men" and that living a life of asceticism and renunciation and smearing your body with ashes and doing a bunch of rituals will bring enlightenment. Total hogwash.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A great book about total stupidity
Review: This is a beautiful book about a bunch of morons. The basic fallacy of this book is that the people written about in this book are "mystic holy men" and that living a life of asceticism and renunciation and smearing your body with ashes and doing a bunch of rituals will bring enlightenment. Total hogwash.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: I found this book fascinating
Review: This is one of my favorite books. Just by looking at the pictures I feel as though I am put in a higher state of consciousness. These men - and a few women - are fascinating. The pictures are beautifully done, and the text is very informative and provides information regarding the different groups of Sadhus and their - by our society's standards - unusual practices.

Two things that I found interesting about this book were: the discussion of rituals done by the Sadhus with the intention of shedding light on the non-duality of life ("life is death, death is life"), and that to the Sadhu "rationality" is not the prime objective in life. The book says that what is considered rational is too grounded in the transient world of appearances to be of concern to the Sadhu. The goal of the Sadhu is to go beyond the world of appearances and duality, and that often means going beyond what the world would consider rational.

This is a group of people that most of us will probably never be able to fully understand, and I certainly do not claim that I do. But I find them fascinating and very inspiring. This book is one of the best documentations of their life and world which, as the book mentions, may sadly be coming to an end due to the influence of the West.


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