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Long Quiet Highway

Waking Up in America

Natalie Goldberg

$39.99

Paperback

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English
Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group
31 March 1999
The author ofWriting Down the Bonesrecounts her journey awakening from the profound sleep of a suburban childhood, describing her fifteen years as a student of Zen Buddhism, her writing, and resistance to change.
By:  
Imprint:   Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 208mm,  Width: 132mm,  Spine: 15mm
Weight:   234g
ISBN:   9780553373158
ISBN 10:   0553373153
Pages:   256
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Natalie Goldberg lives in northern New Mexico and is the author ofWriting Down the Bones,Wild Mind,Long Quiet Highway,Banana Rose, andLiving Color, a book about her work as a painter. She teaches writing in workshops nationwide.

Reviews for Long Quiet Highway: Waking Up in America

Goldberg, author of two popular Zen-inspired writing guides (Wild Mind, 1990; Writing Down the Bones, 1986), tells in simple, dead-honest prose the story of her awakening to writing and to life. Americans, Goldberg says, see writing as a way to break through their own inertia and become awake, to connect with their deepest selves. This way works, she insists, but it is hard. It is a long quiet highway. Goldberg's highway began on Long Island, where her father ran a bar, her mother went on diets, and the future author had the good fortune to have one Mr. Clemente in high school. One clay Mr. Clemente turned off the lights and asked Goldberg and the rest of her class to listen to the rain: That one moment carried me a long way into my life. After attending George Washington University, Goldberg went to graduate school in New Mexico. There, while teaching an unruly class of Mexican and Native American kids, she felt her heart open - an experience that nothing in her study of literature had prepared her for. She headed for the Lama Foundation, a nonsectarian spiritual center, and then to Boulder, where she studied poetry with Allen Ginsberg and took Buddhist vows. Finally, she married and moved to Minneapolis, where she met Katagiri Roshi, the slight, unpretentious Zen teacher who was to have a defining impact on her life. Katagiri told her that writing could take her as far as Zen could if she made her practice deep enough, and he helped her to see that, for her, the direct, bare-bones way was best. A resonant book that will appeal to, and likely help, all who believe that life can be a spiritual adventure. One gripe: The cadence of Goldberg's writing gets monotonous. Isn't it possible to be awake and yet experiment with more intricate prose structures? (Kirkus Reviews)


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