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Reviews
Editorial Reviews
Book Description
Janwillem van de Wetering is an extraordinary writer, as readers familiar
with his works know, whether he is writing as a student of Zen or recounting
the adventures of the distinctively different Amsterdam cops in his mystery
novels. In Afterzen, the long-awaited follow-up to his insightful
and delightful The Empty Mirror and A Glimpse of Nothingness,
van de Wetering provides unorthodox solutions to a collection of classical
koans found in Walter Nowick's The Wisteria Tangle. Van de Wetering
give them his own distinctive touch of humor, down-to-earth reality, and
tough spirituality in the context of meetings and adventures with personalities
"collaged from bits and pieces of teachers and fellow students who kindly
came my way." However, the dream or actual presence of his first teacher,
Roshi, "a sage illuminated by humorous equanimity," is "as true to life
as my malfunctioning keyboard dares to describe." As one interviewer
puts it, van de Wetering "lost his childhood when World War II began."
Most of the students in young Janwillem's private school in Rotterdam,
where his father was a wealthy businessman, were Jewish and died in Treblinka.
It was this and other harrowing wartime experiences that led to his seeking
answers in directions as varied as joining a motorcycle gang and studying
philosophy, and that would finally take him to Zen centers in several parts
of the world. In this third book of the trilogy, van de Wetering is a his
accessible, honest, funny and genuinely spiritual best. |