hasunoha

Please tell me book recommendations

I think there are many monks who answer in Hasunoha who want to help those who are worried, so just looking at those answers is a great learning experience.

Among those monks, there is someone I've been admiring lately.

I'm wondering how to think like that person's way of thinking, trying to act as if it were words sent by that person, and looking at the books they have introduced and Hasunoha's answers, etc.

According to that person, it seems like the book you read changes the way you think, but what kind of books do you read?

If you don't mind, please let me know.
please.

4 Zen Responses

I hope it suits my skin...

Is it someone you admire! That's a happy story. If you've received an answer from that person, you can listen directly to it in a thank-you comment, though.

Well, I'm asking you to recommend what kind of books they're reading, so it's a personal preference...

“Introduction to Buddhism from Zero Knowledge” by Osada Yukiyasu Gentosha
“I'm sorry” by Saku Yuki Kura Shueisha ← manga
“Buddhism Revealing “Me” by Kazujo Ogawa, Higashi Honganji Publishing
“Live by Fortune” by Ogawa Ichijo, Hozokan
“Living an Equal Life” by Ogawa Ichijo, Hozokan
“Thinking about Humans Now” by Ogawa Ichijo Hozokan
“Buddha's Words of Truth, Words of Inspiration” translated by Nakamura, Iwanami Bunko
“Questions about the Meaning of Life: V.E. Frankl” by Yamada Kunio, Kosei Publishing
“Night and Fog: German Concentration Camp Experience Record” author V.E. Frankl translator Shimoyama Tokuji Misuzu Shobo
“Why Namu Amida Buddha” by Fujiba Toshiki Sanga Evangelism Series

Encountering a book, meeting a single person
Things that lead from encounters to my practice and way of life

Please take good care of it.

Gassho

Shoisho

I'm sorry for the bad answer, Gada Hikimizu.

Is the paperback edition from Honganji Publishing Company affordable? I also appreciate the explanation at Kazujo Hakehashi.
Shoisho is dangerous if you misread it, and you may be confused because it says something different from common sense, but why not read it carefully.
I also recommend reading it aloud.
Personally, I appreciate Kujo and the latter order.

To the extent related to Buddhism due to dogmatism and prejudice

(I feel like I've written something like that before. But if it were different, it would be very, very embarrassing, so let's shut up)
Oh, my in-law for Valentine's Day is Seven's Snow Strawberry Musume, OK ← shut up! ('tish (0 = (°))

Joking aside, I don't know who it is, but as an example.
I also recommend books all the time, but in reality, it is ideal to learn by actually studying. I myself am reading this after continuing to be blessed with encounters. Various people and stories appear in my answers, but it shows that everyone is learning from everything.
What has come to my attention recently is “Every Wish Is Rotten,” written by Yasushi Akimoto. I was so impressed by everyone's song. It's totally the spirit of Mahayana Buddhism.

Well, if I don't write the strangely difficult ones... I'll put them in order.

・Kan Sasaki
“What is a monk”
“How did Buddhism view the universe?”
“100 Minute Masterpiece: Buddha's Final Words”
“100 Minute De Masterpiece Intensive Lecture on Mahayana Buddhism” ← read it now

・ “Constructed Buddhism” series
“Gautama Buddha”
“Dogen”

・Semimaru P
“Semimaru P's Tangled Buddhism Course”
Video “Nico Nico Buddhism Course” series

・Nakano Tozen “Shobogenzo Zuibunki”
・Genyu Munehisa “Belabou Life”, “Even Monks Are Worried”
・Tomomatsu Enko “Hakku Sutra”
・Katayama Kazuyoshi “Dhammapada Complete Poems Explanation”
・Nakamura Hajime “Buddha's Words”
・Uogawa Yuji “Zero Points in Buddhist Thought”
・ “Samgha JAPAN” series, to the extent of interest
・Taishu Tagami “Illustrated Buddha's Teachings”
・ “Hasunoha Monk Trouble Counseling Room”
・Tomomi Tarui “Buddha's Medicine Chest”
・Keiko Katsu “Good Monk Terrible Monk”
・Naoya Minami “Osorezan”

・Comic essays
Du Kangjun “Bozu Days” series
Kazuko Amano “Became a Nun in Myanmar”
Hiroshi Arakawa “Peasant Nobility”

・Comics
Suwa Midori “Genjo Seiki” 2 volumes in total
I wonder if Satonaka Machiko's “The People Surrounding Buddha” were 2 volumes in total?
Takehiko Inoue “Vagabond”
Hiroshi Arakawa “Silver Spoons” and “Fullmetal Alchemist”
Hirosachiya, Manga Buddhism Series

Finally, I promoted the new publication of one of my teachers. I'll buy it too. If you study under someone like this, you'll become this kind of monk (← reputational damage)
http://www.yoshikawa-k.co.jp/book/b286023.html

A book that changed my way of thinking

Hachi-sama

This is Kawaguchi Hidetoshi. This is a humble answer to the question.

I'm really happy when it comes to humble things, but it's probably different (laughs)

I had the bad experience of changing my way of thinking depending on the books I read.

As I learned and proceeded with Buddhism from scratch, my way of thinking changed, and there were “Tibetan Buddhist Philosophy” (Professor Matsumoto Shiro, Okura Publishing) and “Critical Research on Zen Thought” (Professor Matsumoto Shiro, Okura Publishing) as books that determined the direction of my humble Buddhist practice.

Both are expensive and difficult academic research papers, but if you are interested again.

If you want to cover the whole of Buddhism and learn it systematically, I recommend the “Dalai Lama's Buddhist Philosophy Lectures” (translated by Yoichi Fukuda, Daito Publishing).

Kawaguchi Hidetoshi Gassho