Meetings with remarkable books, part deux.

May 25, 2010 - 7:48 am 8 Comments

Philosophy and works with a philosophic bent - plus a few seminal works of fiction that became my friends and influenced me.

Siddhartha, by Herman Hesse. Pushed me down that slippery slope towards Buddhism and the wheel of karma.

On the Road, Jack Kerouac - yes, there was a philosophic/nihilist bent to the Beat Generation and Jack Kerouac embodied that - anarchism with a conscience. I possess a strong strain of anarchism in my soul

Jean Paul Sartre - Troubled Sleep - French Existentialism at its finest. Why am I here? What is my purpose? These are questions we have to deal with, or not, everyday.

Franz Kafka - The Trial and The Metamorphosis. German Existentialism. Dark. Grim. Hopeless. The Germans really know how to freak you out!

I’m a big fan of Emile Zola. He considered Germinal his masterpiece and I agree. Of course he was more of a political critic than he was an existentialist, but the book touched my heart and brought out the compassionate political activist in me.

Meetings With Remarkable Men, by G.I. Gurdjieff - chronicles, or attempts to chronicle, mankind’s search for spiritual enlightenment - which leads me directly to Be Here Now, by Ram Dass (a Jew-Budd) - the fun, charming, free-association, multiverse hippie search for meaning in the everyday.

Sons and Lovers. Thank you, D.H. Lawrence for the pleasure of the physical. (See Siddhartha Gautama, the Buddha.)

Carl Jung, my favorite Jungian psychologist with his theories of the archetype, synchronicity and the Collective Unconscious. The two books that made a big impression on me are Man and His Symbols and Memories, Dreams and Reflections. I love to slip these concepts into my books - in a Collective Unconscious sort of way!

I’m not a big Spinoza fan - too wordy and convoluted. I prefer the works of Moses Maimonides. He defined God by what he is not. You cannot say God is one, you must say God is not multiple. Great stuff. Think: Guide for the Perplexed.

The Hero with a Thousand Faces, by Joseph Campbell. I’ve read most of his works. Authors of romance unknowingly use many of his theories of the hero myth in their stories. There is always an obstacle that the hero must overcome, some dark vale he or she must pass through to reach his or her ultimate goal.

Souls on Fire: Portraits and Legends of Hasidic Masters, by Elie Wiesel. You have to read this one for yourself. It’s a good introduction to the heart and soul of the Hasidic movement. I’ll add to this - Days of Our Years, by Pierre Van Paassen, my grandmother’s favorite book which she left to me.

Don’t laugh - Spiritual Midwifery, by Ina May Gaskin. This book became my bible when I was studying midwifery and when I was pregnant with my own children. My copy is so dog-eared! I will always remember one thing Ina May says when discussing fear of childbirth, something I try to apply to every circumstance - The antidote to fear is courage. For anyone unfamiliar with Ina May and Stephen Gaskin and The Farm - http://www.thefarm.org/

Last, but not least…I kid you not…this book altered my path at a critical juncture in my young life - The Teachings of Don Juan: A Yaqui Way of Knowledge, followed by A Separate Reality and Journey to Ixtlan. Contrary to the author’s claims that these works were based on actual interviews with a Yaqui medicine man, I do believe that these books are mostly fiction. It doesn’t matter. I do know that the author, Carlos Castaneda, became a recluse and a real weird dude later in his life, but The Teachings of Don Juan, in particular, opened my mind to otherness/oneness and the notion of separate realities.

Wow. I’m super tired. Must be from listening to Baruch Spinoze! Tomorrow - my favorite myths and then I’ll shut up! Night!

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8 Responses to “Meetings with remarkable books, part deux.”

  1. Katalina Leon Says:

    Again we are dwelling in some similar places. I’ve also read and loved many of the books on this list. As metaphor the Don Juan books are full of wisdom. My copy of Journey to Ixtlan is battered and inspired many paintings and much thought. DH Lawrence the Rainbow was my favorite (and Lady Chatterly’s Lover lol) Ram Dass is a lighthouse of comfort and wisdom as is Joseph Campbell who opened my eyes to the likeness between all cultures. I loved sharing “Siddartha” and “Demian” with my friends in high school it was a huge growth experience for all of us. I love remembering all of this.
    XXOO Kat

  2. Julia Barrett Says:

    Kat - I find it so interesting how much we all share - sometimes I think the bigger publishing world assumes romance and erotic romance writers are stupid - do you know what I mean? That we have no literary background and write insipid stories. Nothing could be further from the truth. The writers I know are the most interesting and eclectic bunch I’ve ever met - you all read extensively.

  3. Katalina Leon Says:

    That’s because women’s sexuality is trivialized and made to sound foolish when we all know female sexuality and intellect raises the creative stakes for humanity in a beautiful way. Maybe we should change publishing by offering something slightly different? You’re the chief, what new flavors would you add to women’s fiction? lol
    XXOO Kat

  4. Julia Barrett Says:

    Well, I’d prefer to have women in charge, however, I do believe that absolute power corrupts absolutely and that applies to women as well as men. Very often I think those who seek power are exactly the people we don’t want in power.
    You know who I really admired? Golda Meir. I never felt that power corrupted her. She seemed to have the self-awareness to avoid abusing her position. We could use a few more world leaders like her now.
    Unfortunately, women seem to feel - with good reason - that they have to act like men in order to achieve like men. Pity…

  5. Katalina Leon Says:

    My Grandmother worked with Golda Meir and admired her greatly. She said Gold was a woman of incredible intelligence and diplomacy.
    XXOO Kat

  6. Katalina Leon Says:

    Excuse me “Golda”- Ms Meir certainly deserves to have her named spelled correctly! lol

  7. Julia Barrett Says:

    Okay, wow! That is just too cool and amazing! I’m in awe of your grandmother!

  8. Katalina Leon Says:

    Women rule quietly behind the scenes…

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