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Triumph of the Sparrow - by Shinkichi Takahashi (Paperback)
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Triumph of the Sparrow - by Shinkichi Takahashi (Paperback)
From Grove Press
Current price: $14.89
TARGET
Triumph of the Sparrow - by Shinkichi Takahashi (Paperback)
From Grove Press
Current price: $14.89
Loading Inventory...
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About the Book Shinkichi Takahashi is one of the truly great figures in world poetry. In the classic Zen tradition of economy, disciplined attention, and subtlety, Takahashi lucidly captures that which is contemporary in its problems and experiences, yet classic in its quest for unity with the Absolute. Lucien Stryk, Takahashis fellow poet and close friend, here presents Takahashis complete body of Zen poems in an English translation that conveys the grace and power of Takahashis superb art. A first-rate poet . . . [Takahashi] springs out of some crack between ordinary worlds: that is, there is some genuine madness of the sort striven for in Zen. -- Robert Bly; We visit places in Takahashi that we once may have visited in a dream, or in a moment too startling to record the perception. . . . You need know nothing of Zen to become immersed in his work. You will inevitably know something of Zen when you emerge. -- Jim Harrison, American Poetry Review Book Synopsis Shinkichi Takahashi is one of the truly great figures in world poetry. In the classic Zen tradition of economy, disciplined attention, and subtlety, Takahashi lucidly captures that which is contemporary in its problems and experiences, yet classic in its quest for unity with the Absolute. Lucien Stryk, Takahashis fellow poet and close friend, here presents Takahashis complete body of Zen poems in an English translation that conveys the grace and power of Takahashis superb art. A first-rate poet . . . [Takahashi] springs out of some crack between ordinary worlds: that is, there is some genuine madness of the sort striven for in Zen. -- Robert Bly; We visit places in Takahashi that we once may have visited in a dream, or in a moment too startling to record the perception. . . . You need know nothing of Zen to become immersed in his work. You will inevitably know something of Zen when you emerge. -- Jim Harrison, American Poetry Review