provocative but obscure
Book review:
Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance:
An Inquiry into Values
by Robert M. Pirsig
New York: William Morrow & Company, Ltd., 1974, 1999
418 pages
This is one of the books that I’ve thought about reading for most of my life.
I gave it my best shot.
It’s not so much that I don’t want to read Pirsig’s story—I think it’s more a case of this is one of his stories that I don’t need to dive into real deep.
I feel like a hungry guy who has just opened a lunchbox that was packed by three different moms, with three different ideas of what I might want to chow down on.
Obviously, Zen is about philosophy and meaning and reality and understanding and stuff.
Pirsig hasn’t written, exactly, a stream of consciousness kind of book, but its choppy organization leads me to lean in that direction, and I’m not up for it.
The non-motorcycle stuff is provocative, but it’s obscure.
The motorcycle stuff is overall a revelation, but I didn’t need to know it.
You read it and make your own decision.
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Book review. Copyright © Richard Carl Subber 2023 All rights reserved.
Book review: Mila 18
horrific truth by Leon Uris
click here
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In other words: Poems for your eyes and ears with 64 free verse and haiku poems,
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© 2023, Richard Subber. All rights reserved.