Questions of heaven : the Chinese journeys of an American Buddhist

by Gretel Ehrlich

Paperback, 1997

Publication

Imprint: Boston : Beacon Press, 1997. Responsibility: Gretel Ehrlich. OCLC Number: 35849019. Physical: Text : 1 volume : 128 pages : maps ; 22 cm. Features: Includes bibliography.

Call number

Travel / Ehrli

Barcode

BK-07863

ISBN

0807073105 / 9780807073100

CSS Library Notes

Description: Gretel Ehrlich's path leads her to Sichuan and Yunnan Provinces in western China to climb Emei Shan, one of China's four sacred Buddhist mountains. For Ehrlich, a practicing Buddhist, the climb is both a spiritual pilgrimage and a troubling encounter with a culture reeling from recent political history. Ehrlich visits Buddhist lamas who, until recently, were in hiding from the purges of the Cultural Revolution, and she travels to a panda refuge in the mountains northwest of Chengdu - in both cases trying to unravel the ultimate fate of these once-revered symbols. "All roads to paradise first pass through purgatory." In perhaps the most hair-raising car-trip narrative in recent travel literature, Ehrlich writes of her journey from the southwestern city of Kunming over the Burma Road and on to Lijiang - an isolated mountain town which does in the end fulfill Ehrlich's hopes for cultural and spiritual revival, and where she learns from an unlikely group of Naxi sacred musicians that "music is medicine" and that profound healing requires profound faith.

Table of Contents: The road to Emei Shan
Disposable pandas
Yunnan
Lijiang
London
Bibliography

FY2018 /

Physical description

128 p.; 22 cm

Description

A Haunting pilgrimage to one of China's holy mountains "Ehrlich . . . writes with tremendous grace and passion." -Miles Harvey,Outside "In spare, lyrical prose, Ehrlich inventively recounts her 1995 spiritual trip to China and Tibet. . . . Like one of the landscape paintings of which she writes, Ehrlich's book is at once delicate, deeply considered and moving." -Publishers Weekly, starred review "Ehrlich's highly personal travelogue centers on her attempt to find what remains of the once-flourishing spiritual culture in the sacred mountains of western China. . . . Ehrlich intersperses her personal narrative with bits of the intellectual, political, historical and spiritual." -Alexandra Hall,The New York Times Book Review "IfQuestions of Heavenhas a message, it may reside in the author's belief in a bond across geography and generations, one transcending space and time." -David L. Ulin,The Village Voice "This is travel writing at its best." -Glenn Masuchika,Library Journal… (more)

Language

Original language

English

User reviews

LibraryThing member cindywho
Small collection of essays about a mountain climbing pilgrimage to China in the mid-90s. Ehrlich finds it a depressing place - until she gets to Lijiang and meets musicians who are trying to preserve some of the heritage that has been shattered by the Cultural Revolution.

Rating

½ (6 ratings; 3.8)
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