Hard Travel to Sacred Places

Hard Travel to Sacred Places
Title Hard Travel to Sacred Places PDF eBook
Author Rudolph Wurlitzer
Publisher Shambhala Publications
Total Pages 178
Release 1995-09-11
Genre Travel
ISBN

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Hard Travel to Sacred Places is the record of a personal odyssey through Southeast Asia, an external and internal journey through grief and the painful realities of a decadent age. Wurlitzer—novelist, screenwriter, and Buddhist practitioner—travels with his wife, photographer Lynn Davis, on a photo assignment to the sacred sites of Thailand, Burma, and Cambodia. Heavy Westernization, sex clubs, aging hippies and expatriates, and political dissidents provide a vivid contrast to the peace that Wurlitzer and Davis seek, still reeling from the death of their son in a car accident. As Davis with her camera searches for a thread of meaning among the artifacts and relics of a more enlightened age, Wurlitzer grasps at the wisdom of the Buddhist teachings in an effort to assuage his grief. His journal chronicles the survival of age-old truths in a world gone mad.

Sacred Places of a Lifetime

Sacred Places of a Lifetime
Title Sacred Places of a Lifetime PDF eBook
Author National Geographic
Publisher National Geographic Books
Total Pages 408
Release 2008
Genre Reference
ISBN 9781426203367

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A listing of five hundred sites new and old, famous and unknown, that have been used to connect humanity with its gods.

Sacred Places Around the World

Sacred Places Around the World
Title Sacred Places Around the World PDF eBook
Author Brad Olsen
Publisher CCC Publishing
Total Pages 289
Release 2004-02-01
Genre Travel
ISBN 1888729317

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World travelers and armchair tourists who want to explore the mythology and archaeology of the ruins, sanctuaries, mountains, lost cities, and temples of ancient civilizations will find this guide ideal. Detailed here are the monuments and sites where ancient peoples once gathered to perform sacred rituals and ceremonies to worship various gods and to achieve spiritual enlightenment. Important archaeological, historical, and geological destinations worldwide are profiled, from the Great Pyramid in Egypt and the Forbidden City in China to the Temples of Angkor in Cambodia and Mount Shasta in California. Sites are described in historical and cultural context, and practical contemporary travel information is provided, including detailed maps, drawings, photographs, and travel directions.

Sacred Places in North America

Sacred Places in North America
Title Sacred Places in North America PDF eBook
Author Courtney Milne
Publisher Harry N. Abrams
Total Pages 0
Release 1999-08-10
Genre Religion
ISBN 9781556709579

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At the dawn of the 1990 autumn equinox, Courtney Milne climbed into the bucket of a hydraulic lift and was hoisted forty feet into the air beside the Big Horn Medicine Wheel in northern Wyoming. From that perspective, it seemed to him as though the Big Horn wheel linked the distant plains with the heavens. And so, the wheel became the starting point of his photographic journey as he followed each spoke across the continent in search of sacred landscapes.

Sacred Places Europe

Sacred Places Europe
Title Sacred Places Europe PDF eBook
Author Brad Olsen
Publisher CCC Publishing
Total Pages 342
Release 2007
Genre Religion
ISBN 9781888729122

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Combining current trends, academic theories, and historical insights, this travel guide brings both lesser-known and famous European spiritual locales into perspective by explaining the significance of each sacred site. The cultural relevance, history, and spirituality of each site—including Stonehenge, the Acropolis, Mont Saint Michel, Pompeii, and Saint Peter’s Basilica—are explained, creating a moving and artistic travel experience. Each destination—with selections spanning more than 15 countries throughout Europe—is accompanied by easy-to-follow maps and directions.

1000 Sacred Places

1000 Sacred Places
Title 1000 Sacred Places PDF eBook
Author Christoph Engels
Publisher H F Ullmann
Total Pages 0
Release 2010
Genre Church architecture
ISBN 9783833154805

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A world travel to religious and spiritual sites. The book invites readers to embark on a spiritual journey through the history and the cultures of the world.

The Drop Edge of Yonder

The Drop Edge of Yonder
Title The Drop Edge of Yonder PDF eBook
Author Rudolph Wurlitzer
Publisher Two Dollar Radio
Total Pages 252
Release 2017-02-20
Genre Fiction
ISBN 1937512622

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The Drop Edge of Yonder is an adventurous book that explores the truth and temptations of the American myth. Beginning in the savage wilds of Colorado in the waning days of the fur trade, the story follows Zebulon Shook, a mountain man who has had a curse placed on him by a mysterious Native American woman whose lover he murdered. The book follows Zebulon as he encounters people obsessed with greed and the politics of expansion. The trail takes him from Colorado to the remote reaches of the Northwest, a journey that traverses the Gulf of Mexico to Panama, and up the coast of California to San Francisco and the gold fields. Far from being simply a “western,” The Drop Edge of Yonder focuses on a time that could be considered the starting point of American capitalism and expansionism, and has led Judith Thurman to refer to the book as “a subversive modern novel about the bounds of love and the discontents of civilized life.” The Drop Edge of Yonder originated as a screenplay treatment that intrigued Hollywood folk such as Sam Peckinpah, Hal Ashby, Yves Simeneau, Jim Jarmusch, Roger Spotiswoode, Alex Cox, and Richard Gere, before being adapted and expanded into this original novel by Wurlitzer.