View Full Version : Siddhartha
Scholar_Warrior
08-07-2006, 03:12 AM
By Hermann Hesse
Anyone else blown away by this book?
http://www.online-literature.com/hesse/siddhartha/
BlackBillBlake
08-08-2006, 10:41 PM
It's a book I enjoyed - actually though, I thought 'The Glass Bead Game' 'Steppenwolf' and 'Demian' were better.
Hesse was, as Tim Leary said, a poet of the interior journey.
Scholar_Warrior
08-09-2006, 03:20 AM
Damn! Two of the three you've just mentioned have been on my list for years now... I should get around to it.
SvgGrdnBeauty
08-09-2006, 08:26 AM
It was a very good book...I really found it beautiful in its own way. :)
HoneySuckleBlue
08-14-2006, 05:01 AM
I thought it was a great illustration of following your own path. I look foreward to reading more of Hermann's books.
heehee Hermann....
Scholar_Warrior
08-15-2006, 04:32 AM
heehee. Hermann. yer funny.
HoneySuckleBlue
08-22-2006, 01:09 AM
:p It's just sucha contradictory, yet whole name...that and it brings to me an image of the sweetest Munster:)
http://www.breakdownlane.net/tbl/archives/munster_herman_face.jpg
So what were your top favorite points from the story? There were so many good ones...
I loved that he learned more about becoming himself from living by a river with a happy man, than from following study groups with profoundly wise leaders and sewing his seeds with a hot chick, yet all of his experiences were necessary for him to appriciate each consecutive lesson.
Perhaps i already said that though in different words...:&
Scholar_Warrior
08-23-2006, 04:11 AM
At first, he had the gift of a spiritual heritage, which he escaped and denied before it came time to accept that role. He chose aceticism. He became equally disillusioned with this as well, and next became the penultimate materialist and did that to the utmost, but it nearly killed his body. Finally, he simply surrendered the need for nothing and surrendered the need for anything, and at last accepted everything as it passed by.
Keen, hunh?
btw, I agree that Herman was the most loveable Munster.
HoneySuckleBlue
08-24-2006, 12:23 AM
I suppose that is a good way to show the extremes people go through till they find their middle ground?
OleFlowerMan
08-25-2006, 05:34 AM
When I graduated from Drug Court we had to say a little something about our journy and what we had learned. I took several of my favorite books and I said something like books...blah blah. After the graduation ceremony the judge , my age, took his robe off and came over to me and ask me what was my favorite book...Wow I said, if i had to pick one it would be Siddhartha by Hesse. He said he was going to buy it that day. Happy to say I haven't seen the judge since then and that was about 3 yrs ago:) I do spend alot more time by the river these days. It used to look like a big skunky muddy missouri river.
It's looking very special and beautiful these days the longer I watch it the more special it becomes...it's a great place to be naked too :) This pic is Me by the river. People who know me say they've never seen me look as happy as i do in this pic.
indydude
05-10-2009, 05:23 AM
Hesse is one of my favorites! 'Steppingwolf' gets better the older I get. I've read it a few times. 'Glass Bead' game is fantastic too! I just read 'Ishmal' and very happy I did. Check it out if you see it at a used book store.
ObjetdArte
05-15-2009, 10:11 PM
i am actually rereading this book for the 5th time this summer. i loved it the first time i read it and will continue to. i do not have a lot of time for pleasure reading during the school year but i am so looking forward to this.
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