Siddhartha
 

Siddhartha

by Hermann Hesse

In the shade of a banyan tree, a grizzled ferryman sits listening to the river. Some say he's a sage. He was once a wandering shramana and, briefly, like thousands of others, he followed Gotama the Buddha, enraptured by his sermons. But this man, Siddhartha, was not a follower of any but his own soul. Born the son of a Brahmin, Siddhartha was blessed in appearance, intelligence, and ... (read more)

Top tags: fictionspiritualitybuddhismphilosophyreligion (all tags)

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  • Selina C

    selina c said:

    It's very good. I reckon the tale should actually be shelved in the 'religion' non fiction section of the library amongst all the expoundings from teachers and gurus.. (just to be subversive :-) in my library I found it in the fiction amongst all the novels.

    posted Friday, July 4 2008
  • alienashu

    alienashu said:

    It is one of the most enlightening books that explains how everyone has to go alone in her/his quest for wisdom.

    posted Friday, June 27 2008
  • Christina S

    christina s said:

    I thought the book was boring but i liked the language in it.

    posted Thursday, June 12 2008
  • talal

    talal said:

    this book talks abou everybody soul ; this is our life and we should know how to live it ;this novel shortens the meaning of the life .......like the last temptation of the Christ which was written by Nicos Kazantazakis

    posted Friday, May 16 2008
  • Victoriakem

    victoriakem said:

    This book was a coming of age read for me. All my friends read it. The classic story of one man's journey to enlightenent, the Buddha himself, is well known but Hesse made it an engrossing read. I'm always surprised when many others in my "age group" haven't read this.

    posted Saturday, April 19 2008
  • Surabhi

    surabhi said:

    Hermann Hesse referred to his novels as "biographies of the soul." In Siddhartha (1922), the title character is an exceptionally intelligent Brahman, a member of the highest caste in the Hindu religion, who seemingly has a well-ordered existence yet feels spiritually hollow. Siddhartha embarks on a journey of self-discovery that takes him through a period of asceticism and self-denial followed by one of sensual indulgence. An encounter with Buddha is intellectually meaningful but not spiritually affecting, and Siddhartha continues his own search, ultimately finding peace by a river. Siddhartha's search for truth and identity, the "inward journey" as Hesse referred to this recurring theme in his work, is reflective of the autobiographical and introspective nature of Hesse's writing.

    Hesse's works are distinctive, challenging, and unlike most of the works of Western writers. He has enjoyed periods of great popularity as well as periods of either neglect and even scorn. Although his receipt of the 1946 Nobel Prize for Literature spurred a flurry of translations, which included the 1951 English translation of Siddhartha, his works did not gain much recognition in the English-speaking world until the 1960s. Hesse excelled in the depiction of personal crisis and private agony; such literature seems to be particularly popular during periods of cultural crisis, which accounts by and large for Hesse's idolization in Germany immediately after two devastating wars. He was similarly venerated in the United States during the politically and socially chaotic 1960s and 1970s.

    posted Saturday, April 19 2008 ( | view 1 reply )
  • Smita J

    smita j said:

    Great book! says nothing that you didn't already know but tells it beautifully...but isn't that what wisdom is? Something you already know, but sometimes you just need a little reminder. I liked Demian and Steppenwolf as well...but I found Glass Bead Game notoriously abstruse.

    posted Sunday, February 24 2008 ( | view 1 reply )
  • K. Patrick M

    k. patrick m said:

    Mary, Mary! You hit the nail squarely on the head RE: "He was bringing you a mirror to you. All good writers do that, even fictions ones do. That's why you relate to the stories and read more of their series, or more stories written by the same authors: you connect with their thinking process, because they mirror back to you" Such a good quote generally Mary. I wish I'd said it myself. Hahahaha!

    posted Friday, January 18 2008
  • Mary M

    mary m said:

    I want to address everyone about my comment below: Any good author wants to take you to yourself (in spirituality) they are not trying to sell you something else. Hesse although a fiction writer, was also very philisophical and spiritual in a time that was forbidden. His book was ground breaking in the fact that he took a leap and said "look at yourself in the river" You are the ferryman, you are Siddhartha, you are Buddha--reminding us that Godd/ess whatever your belief (including all religions) lives within. Remember folks, this was in 1947. He was bringing you a mirror to you. All good writers do that, even fictions ones do. That's why you relate to the stories and read more of their series, or more stories written by the same authors: you connect with their thinking process, because they mirror back to you, their relationship with you. Not my opinion, but what I was taught in graduate school; as well as talking to authors about writing. In Hesse's case, he had a lot to hide, without being killed. He also had something to say about ourselves and about balance and "ripples" of everyday life; how we endure them.
    Once again, there was no New Age Movement, no wishy washing feel good spirituality back then. Sorry.

    posted Friday, January 18 2008 ( | view 1 reply )
  • hosna G

    hosna g said:

    THIS IS MY FAVORIT BOOK.I LIKE IT TOO MUCH.
    از این کتاب خیلی چیز یاد گرفتم و به من دز پیمودن راهی که در پیش گرفتم کمک کرد

    posted Tuesday, January 8 2008

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