Siddhartha, by Hermann Hesse
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Siddhartha, by Hermann Hesse
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Siddhartha By Hermann Hesse
Siddhartha, by Hermann Hesse- Amazon Sales Rank: #775125 in Books
- Published on: 2015-05-18
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 9.21" h x .24" w x 6.14" l, .49 pounds
- Binding: Paperback
- 106 pages
Review "No living English-speaking actor outshines Derek Jacobi, nor any audiobook reader for that matter. He sings, rather than speaks, with extraordinary lyricism, expressiveness and depth...Jacobi approached the text with a direct, childlike fervor. He brings home the subtleties of Siddhartha's inner journey with amazing clarity and resonance, which he makes more exciting than the most thrilling thriller." --AudioFile, October/November 1998
About the Author Hermann Hesse was born in 1877 in Calw, Germany. He won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1946. He is the author of Steppenwolf, Narcissus and Goldmund, Journey to the East, The Glass Bead Game, and many other books.
Sherab Chödzin Kohn has translated numerous books of spiritual and psychological interest from German and other European languages. He was a close student of Tibetan meditation master Chögyam Trungpa and is the author of The Awakened One: A Life of the Buddha.
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Most helpful customer reviews
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful. Try another Translation first By Richard Y. This review is for the version of Siddhartha translated by W. K. Marriott and published in 2013. I have read "Siddhartha" by one translator or another every year starting in 1978 (it is now 2014). I try to find new translations hoping that it will stimulate my reading of the book. In recent years, there have been many. This one, however, as other reviewers has stated, has so many typos that it difficult to read - especially if this is your first try. Do NOT read this translation first. The New Directions translation, the only one available for many years, is not exactly in modern English, but it beats the heck out of this version.I DO, however, strongly recommend reading a decent version of the novel. One of Hesse's best (and I've read them all).
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. DO NOT BUY By Connor This is an absolutely terrible translation of a great book. This edition is so badly riddled with typos and illogical translations that I couldn't read more than a few pages. It would be easier to just learn German and read the original than to actually finish reading this translation.
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. An Eastern Lighthouse for the Lost Westerner By Firecat Hat My name is Firecat Hat. As a writer, I love to read great writer’s works. And this book is definitely one I enjoyed. ‘Siddhartha’ is a deeply eastern philosophical story written by a westerner with a keen perception, and almost uncanny awareness, of not only eastern thinking, but depth of life itself. Sometimes the insights he has really impress me. He is aware of abstract concepts of life that few people in our modern world ever talk about. ‘Siddhartha’ is a remarkably insightful book by a remarkably insightful writer. The lessons about life that this book has to offer are deep – lessons one would be very lucky to hear from some aged and helpful older person, good enough to share with us. The man is a guru. The tragedy of the story, I believe, centers around Govinda, around that character’s separation from Siddhartha. Whether the separation from him is actually necessary for the two of them to advance on their roads through life is, I think, a subject for interesting debate. But Hesse shows that they separate, and indeed that it is necessary for the blossoming of their characters. One can’t help but feel sorry for Govinda. And I noticed something in this book worth remarking. While Hesse is brilliant philosophically, he does not bleed the emotional parts of the story to their maximum effect. That is, he never gets the reader to ‘feel’ the story on an emotional level. (He never made me cry). But, I must say that this also makes us feel the story’s emotion even better. Sometimes by not emphasizing the emotional tones, the reader is made to feel them – underlying as they are – even stronger. Overall, this is a philosophy book almost unparalleled as such in the novel world. It shows us the journey of life, with masterful language that is very reader-friendly, cover to cover. It has the potential to be, in fact, life changing. And it stands with the classics, tall and deep. It stands like the Sequoia trees: tall for all to see, living on and on – timeless. And one last point worth remarking. The book’s main point is something profound, and that I agree with. Happiness can not be pointed out precisely to one by anyone else. ‘Each entered the forest adventurous at a point that he himself had chosen, where it was darkest, and there was no way or path.’F I R E C A T H A TMay 18, 2011
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