An Unlikely Prophet: Revelations on the Path Without Form

by Alvin Schwartz

Paperback, 1997

Status

Available

Call number

813.54

Collection

Publication

Divina (1997), 242 pages

Description

A profound investigation into the shifting nature of identity and reality * Looks at the ways thought is embodied and how it takes on a life of its own * Shows how Superman, an archetype of popular culture, is a perfect example of the nonlocality of quantum physics Writer Alvin Schwartz received a great deal of attention from fans when he began talking publicly about his seventeen-year stint writing Superman and Batman comics. One of the individuals who contacted him was no ordinary fan, but a seven-foot Buddhist monk named Thongden, a tulpa or individual who was thought into being by a Tibetan mystic. Thongden put Alvin Schwartz on the path without form, an amazing journey he took in the company of Hawaiian kahunas, quantum physicists, and superheroes. Superman, as it turns out, is also a tulpa, a being created by thought that takes on a life of its own and, in Mr. Schwartz's words, is an archetype expressing the sense of nonlocality that is always present in the back of our minds--that capacity to be everywhere instantly. Superman is one of the specific forms that embodies our reality when we're at our highest point, when we're truly impermeable, indestructible, totally concentrated, and living entirely in the now, a condition each of us actually attains from time to time. Alvin Schwartz's story is a personal journey through a lifelong remembrance of synchrony, inspiration, accident, and magic. As it unfolds it puts into vivid clarity the saving grace that inhabits every moment of our lives. The author travels as a stranger in a strange land, whose greatest oddity is that this land is our own.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member conformer
A queer little book, but not without merit. The subtitle calls it a "metaphysical memoir," and that's true after a fashion, even if it only describes a singular event that set Alvin Schwartz on the Buddhist "Path Without Form," which is as hard to describe as it sounds. Parts of it are strange and
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fantastic, especially all the time Schwartz recalls spending with the Tibetan tulpa (a being of pure thought brought into physical form) who sought him out, and the fairly improbable things that happened afterwards. It has a good payoff at the end, tho; when Superman's role as a tulpa himself is revealed.Not a bad read. Schwartz's writing style is a little wooden at times, but if you roll thru it with the idea that it's a recollection of personal transformation instead of an eyewitness account of the hidden world in action, it becomes less and less silly.
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Language

Original language

English

Physical description

242 p.; 8 inches

ISBN

0965952126 / 9780965952125

Local notes

PKB A Metaphysical Memoir by the Legendary Writer of Superman and Batman

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