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Editorial Reviews
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The history of Zen can be almost as perplexing as its cryptic koan.
In many accounts of Zen history, it is hard to tell who is Chinese and
who is Japanese, who lived in the 6th century and who in the 16th. Andy
Ferguson attempts to clear the air once and for all. In Zen's Chinese
Heritage, he organizes all of the Chinese Zen masters from Bodhidharma
at the turn of the 5th century to Huikai in the 13th century, presenting
their core records and writings in chronological order by generation--25
generations in all. Drawing from Wudeng Huiyan (Compendium of
Five Lamps) and other records, Ferguson translates the classic Zen
teachings (including dialogues, anecdotes, and koan) in spare, straightforward
language. He also presents an expertly arranged foldout lineage chart of
the Zen ancestors, with cross-referencing by Japanese, Chinese pinyin,
and Chinese Wade-Giles transcriptions. Ferguson's work is not only a priceless
treasury of Zen literature but also a road map to the history of Zen. --Brian
Bruya
Book Description
It is something of a commonplace that Zen Buddhism is the property
of Japan; this excellent and exhaustive book remind us of the vast, though
now neglected, patrimony of Buddhist spiritual knowledge that comes not
from Japan but China. Ferguson's work is at once a history and an anthology
of this fascinating tradition and includes many koans, anecdotes, and stories,
as well as a wonderfully clear wallchart "Map of the Zen Ancestors." This
splendid repository should give instruction and pleasure... |