The Buddha's apprentice at bedtime Tales of compassion and kindness for you to read with your child, to delight and inspire

Nagaraja

Book - 2013

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j294.38/Nagaraja
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Location Call Number   Status
Children's Room j294.38/Nagaraja Checked In
Subjects
Published
London : Watkins 2013.
Language
English
Main Author
Nagaraja (author)
Physical Description
127 pages : color illustrations ; 24 cm
ISBN
9781780285146
  • Background for Parents
  • About This Book
  • The Buddha and Buddhism
  • The Eightfold Noble Path
  • Working with the Stories
  • Taking Buddhism Further
  • Introducing Meditation
  • The Art of Storytelling
  • Eighteen Stories About The Noble Eightfold Path
  • Bella and the Magic Soup: Right Concentration
  • The Magic Moonlight Tree: Right Intention
  • The New Girl: Right Action
  • Ester and Lucky: Right Livelihood
  • The Shiny Red Train: Right Action
  • The Sheep Stealers: Right Effort
  • Aloka and the Band of Robbers: Right Concentration
  • The Monkey Thieves: Right Action
  • Angelica and. King Frederick: Right View
  • The Beautiful White Horse: Right Mindfulness
  • Danan and the Serpent: Right Intention
  • The Spirit of the Tree: Right View
  • Egbert and the Fisherman: Right Speech
  • Amrita and the Elephants: Right Mindfulness
  • The Lion and the Boar: Right Speech
  • Tim and Grandpa Joe: Right View
  • The Desert Willow: Right Effort
  • Antonio and His Treasure: Right Livelihood
  • The Art of Meditation
  • Preparing to Meditate
  • Beautiful White Horse Meditation
  • Crossing the River Meditation
  • Magic Moonlight Tree Meditation
  • Index of Values and Issues
  • Acknowledgments
Review by Kirkus Book Review

What better way to start off a good night's sleep than with a nugget of ancient wisdom? Scottish Buddhist monk Nagaraja presents a collection of 18 bedtime stories based on the Jakata Tales, folk tales featuring earlier incarnations of the Buddha. Each urges readers to "[r]elax, close your eyes, and imagine" a specific scene or animal or person. This standard opening is followed by, "Do you want to know what happened? Then listen closely." Each of the three-to-five-page tales is capped by a moral tied to a step on the Eightfold Noble Path, Buddha's directives for overcoming suffering. A girl learns compassion when she's magically made to feel the pain of a rabbit she's injured. The tiny denizens of a desert willow learn their talents are important when they fend off larger animals by working together. The morals are succinct and instructive, but the tales are uneven; a few may inspire more questions about the bizarre actions of the characters than about the intended lessons. Meditation instructions appear at the close, along with a helpful index to issues and values from the tales. Brief explanations of the Four Noble Truths and the Eightfold Path and guidance on the book's use round out the package, which is illustrated with big-eyed, bright, happy-looking animals and people. It fills a niche for Buddhist families, but it's not really for the uninitiated. (Short stories. 4-8)]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.