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Paperback Hua Hu Ching: The Unknown Teachings of Lao Tzu Book

ISBN: 0060692456

ISBN13: 9780060692452

Hua Hu Ching: The Unknown Teachings of Lao Tzu

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Book Overview

The perfect companion to Stephen Mitchell's version of the Tao Te Ching, this is the astonishing rendering of Lao Tzu's further writings. Each of the eighty-one teachings presented by Taoist scholar and poet Brian Walker are rich with wisdom, mystery, and startling enlightenment.

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

Wonderful reading, though not entirely orthodox.

HUA HU CHING : The Unknown Teachings of Lao Tzu. By Brian Walker. 108 pp. San Francisco : Harper, 1995. ISBN 0060692456 (pbk.)Anyone who has read Lao Tzu and Chuang Tzu will find much that is familiar in this book. They will also find much that is strikingly new and different, so much so that one doubts very much that this book could have been written by Lao Tzu (always supposing that such a person actually existed). The book seems fairly obviously to be the work of much later thinkers, which isn't to say we should dismiss it because of that. Although certain of its ideas are, in terms of philosophic Taoism, perfectly orthodox, others are highly unorthodox, but ALL are beautifully expressed. Brian Walker has a wonderfully lucid style, and despite the unorthodoxy of certain passages, it seems to me that a book like this can only do good. It brings to the West a wisdom that many more people would benefit from being exposed to, and for a certain kind of reader it might prove more approachable than even Stephen Mitchell's marvelous reworking and adaptation of the 'Tao Te Ching.' Although I can understand the objections of the purists, I don't seen any harm being done, particularly if newcomers were to follow it up with a reading of either, or preferably both, the 'Tao Te Ching' and Chuang Tzu.Chapter 10 immediately caught my attention. Here is the opening with my obliques to indicate line breaks:"The ego is a monkey catapulting through the jungle : / Totally fascinated by the realm of the senses, / it swings from one desire to the next, / one conflict to the next. / If you threaten it, it actually fears for its life. // Let this monkey go..." (p.13).It would be difficult to argue against the orthodoxy of this wonderful poem, a poem that describes the human dilemma so well, since Hakuin (1686-1769), one of Japan's greatest Zen Masters, actually painted a picture of such a scene and inscribed the following poem on it:"The monkey is reaching for the moon in the water / Until death overtakes him he'll never give up. / If he'd let go the branch and disappear in the deep pool / The whole world would shine in dazzling pureness" (Sasaki, 'The Zen Koan,' page 132).Clearly both of these writers were in total agreement about the nature of the human dilemma, and it would not be too difficult to find many other parallels. I think Walker has given us a wonderful book, and I doubt very much that its residue of unorthodoxy will bother those readers for whom the book is intended. In fact it seems to me that its brilliant development of certain perfectly orthodox ideas more than makes up for whatever elements of religious Taoism it may contain.

Oral teachings of the Tao

Although, maybe not the original words of Lao-Tzu, they surely do ring clear to more understanding of the Tao. The tao is something that is not easy to become one with, but this book does a wonderful job helping those who are searching come closer to the Tao. Highly recommended to anyone who liked Tao Te Ching.

Great book and easy to apprehend

This is the first book on hua hu ching that i have ever read. i also bought master Ni's work under the same book title, but to be honest, i prefer walker's book to the latter, since it's less confusing. This book has given me so much thought and understanding. Walker has really done a wonderful job and thank you a zillion times walker.

Walker does it again.

Very few "western" philosophers can truly do justice to the teachings of Lao-Tzu. Because of the problems of translating ancient Chinese to current English and the inability for most people to understand the basic concepts Lao-Tzu was attempting to get across, it is most difficult to give the works of the old master the translations they deserve. Walker, however, does a masterful job in this respect, as he did in The Tao Te Ching of Lao Tzu. I firmly recomend both books for individuals both beginning to delve into Taoism and seasoned in the philosopy. This translation is definitely the best to date
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