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The Tao of Bruce Lee

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Good

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Book Overview

Just weeks after completing Enter the Dragon, his first vehicle for a worldwide audience, Bruce Lee - the self-proclaimed world's fittest man - died mysteriously at the age of thirty-two. The film has... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Fun reading

"I desperately need something to read", I suddenly recalled when I was heading for my favourite coffeshop. So, I popped in and started to look for something, and this book sort of beamed at me. I got it under the impression that it was a biography about Bruce Lee, but it turns out that it is more a book about Davis Miller's relation to Bruce Lee and how Lee has influenced him. It is very easy reading and a quite nice book, and at page 97 and onwards a small biography about Bruce Lee (or Li Jun Fan, which was his real name) appears. Apparently it is hard to find any books with true facts, Davis Miller claims that this one shall be rather close to truth, and you will learn that Bruce Lee wasn't the lonely martial arts master that one thinks. If you like martial arts in general, and more specifically Bruce Lee, get this book, you will finish it within a couple of days and it is fun reading.

worth a read for never published details of Lee's death

Aside from Davis Miller's own personal, very poignant, pithily written story in this book, 'Tao of Bruce Lee' should be read for the revelatory details of Bruce Lee's demise, so many of which have never before been revealed. This is the only book of consequence about Bruce Lee -- and a powerful yet abstruse read that should be honoured and learnt from.

Riveting Reading!

At last a book on Lee from a REAL Author! Davis Miller combines a biography of Bruce Lee with his own inspiring story of a youngster growing up in North Carolina. This is truly 'A' class writing that literally keeps you on the edge of your seat, not only to find out some home truths about Bruce Lee but also to follow the progress of the young 'foetus' Miller as he struggles to find his own identity. I had never heard of the author until I read this book and only picked it up because of it's subject matter but I will make a point of purchasing anything Miller writes in the future, Lee related or not. This is not only a must buy for any Bruce Lee fan but a must buy for any lover of great literature. 5 star reading from a 5 star author!

A Refreshing Look at Bruce Lee

Davis Miller's book is a wonderful read. I've read many, many books on Bruce and I found that the way Miller blends his own life with Bruce's to be especially interesting, enabling the reader to identify with the author. Yes, the first part of the book deals with Miller's earlier years, but at the same time many bits of info about Lee, and Muhammad Ali (who Lee and the author both admire(d)-Miller has also written "The Tao of Muhammad Ali") are sprinkled throughout. The latter half of the book serves as a fresh biography of Lee. He is not presented as a god, but as a human. It is presented in a matter-of-fact way, and lets you form your own opinions or conclusions. Probably how Lee himself would have liked it. I recommend anyone, fan(atic) or no, read this book.

beautifully written personal essay and social commentary

First, this is a book that will unfortunately infuriate many of the most extreme Bruce Lee fans, though Davis Miller is very patient and gentle in his regard for Lee. Those of us who are less prone to accept Bruce Lee's martial arts godness are likely to be deeply affected by Miller's own very optimistic story, his commentary about the dangers of religious literalism and his exploration of the nature of myth, as well as Lee's cautionary tale about the myopic downsides of personal ambition. And many people who have had little interest in Lee or his movies will find that they are thoroughly captivated by Miller's storytelling ability and, in the process, they will find that they gain a real-world respect for Bruce Lee. "The Tao of Bruce Lee: a martial arts memoir" is the story of the influence that Lee had on the young Davis Miller and how the more mature Miller outgrew his childhood idol and finally what he calls the "sociopathic prettification of violence." In this way, and others, this book can be compared to the wonderful film, "Breaking Away," the hopeful account of a troubled teenager who is besmitten with the Italian national bicycling team and how, when he finally manages to race them, he is forced to outgrow his simple-minded romance and become his own (much more interesting and capable) person. Miller writes in a style that is accessible and enjoyable to almost every reader, Bruce Lee extremists notwithstanding. This book is an extension of his outstanding first book, "The Tao of Muhammad Ali," and since that book was published in 1996, Miller has grown significantly as a writer. Together, the two books can be seen as the yin and the yang of the same story. "The Tao of Bruce Lee" is a fascinating mix of serious personal essay, new journalism, memoir, and sumptuous old-fashioned storytelling that, in many ways, is unlike anything else that I have read, though Miller himself notes the influences of Joan Didion and Tim O'Brien, among others. And this is every bit as fine a book as Mr. O'Brien's "The Things They Carried" and Ms. Didion's "Slouching Towards Bethlehem," both of which are among the best pieces of American writing of the past half-century. "The Tao of Bruce Lee: a martial arts memoir" is a brave and beautiful book that deserves a large, mainstream audience. I hope that it can somehow manage to find its proper home among discerning readers who care about non-genre literature. Miller's new book easily ranks among the best American writing of this new century.
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