The following text field will produce suggestions that follow it as you type.

River Stone Running
River Stone Running

River Stone Running

Current price: $15.00
Loading Inventory...
Get it at Barnes and Noble

Size: OS

Get it at Barnes and Noble
Half essays and half poems, examines traditions of direct address by humans in dialogue with spirit or spirits or gods: something wondrous. The passages chosen here, from Islam, Christianity, Judaism, Hinduism, Buddhism, and indigenous religions, differ from one-sided prayer in that they often present some form of reply from the god or spirit. Join in when the medieval visionary Julian of Norwich and ecstatic poet Rumi introduce their gods as "merry" or "laughing." Compare Socrates' "inner oracle," a nudge that steers him from folly, to the hand sensations that guide a Native American medicine seer to select among possible remedies. Hear how Hindu singers address their gods in terms usually reserved for a lover. Then discover how Old Testament prophets, long scornful of Middle Eastern fertility worship, surprisingly borrow a similar passionate imagery to describe Yahweh and his "bride." Follow modern Jewish philosopher Martin Buber in making the interchange of I and Thou the necessary catalyst to allow sacredness to come into the world. The second half of assembles my own poetry in series such as "Consulting at Julian's Window," "For Rumi: What's in a Face?" and "Buddha Footprints in Stone." Often, a still-learning I-speaker in the poems questions someone (a human teacher from the first half? a god? a somehow signaling tree or octopus?), in order to participate in the invitation of the book as a whole to enter into a dialogue. The poems pay attention to ordinary people, with real personal or political problems, on the theory that, if our various religions don't work for us in our lives, where would they work?
Powered by Adeptmind