PETER HASKEL received a PhD in East Asian Studies from Columbia University. He is the translator of Bankei Zen- Translations from the Record of Bankei, Great Fool- Zen Master Ry kan-Letters and Other Writings, Letting Go- The Story of Zen Master T sui, and Sword of Zen- Master Takuan and His Writings on Immovable Wisdom and the Sword Taia.
In his first-rate translation of the tales of Zen masters Taigu, Sengai, Hakuin, and Ryokan, Haskel captures the spirit and the humor of these unique teachers. Like Haskel's previous books on Zen masters Bankei, Ryokan, and Tosui, he brings these eccentric Zen men to life. In the introduction he reminds us how these tales or myths, though not exact factual histories of these men and woman, may be what the spirit of Zen is all about. -Arthur Braverman, author of Mud and Water: The Zen Teaching of Master Bassui In Zen Master Tales, Peter Haskel offers us an everyday view of four of the greatest and quirkiest Zen masters of Japan. Most of these tales are appearing here in English for the first time and ring true like folk stories rather than formal encounter dialogues. So the book goes down like a hot chocolate on a wintry night. -Dosho Port, author of The Record of Empty Hall: One Hundred Classic Koans Zen Master Tales opens the world of Zen through its stories and reveals who and what we really are. It tells the truths of Zen in a manner I think best for our age, both skeptical and seeking. -James Ishmael Ford, author of Introduction to Zen Koans Well-researched [and] presented in a cool, relaxed, and easy-to-read manner. -Buddhistdoor Global