Suzanne:
- "The Journals
of Thomas Merton"
A full series was published several years ago, from before he entered
the monastery to his death during trip to Asia in 1968. Astonishingly
rich on many levels.
- The works of Martin
Buber.
"I and Thou" is the best known, but I love his work on
the Talmud and Hassidic thought and the meaning of Zionism
- "Tao Te
Ching" by Lao Tzu, as interpreted by Ursula K. LeGuin.
No comment possible except that I also adore her fiction.
- "Refuge"
by Terry Tempest Williams
She weaves truth and compassion and difficult family and cultural issues
related to cancer with stunning descriptions of the wild-land environment
she loves.
- "Two Old
Women" by Velma Wallis
It's an Alaskan Athabascan Indian legend retold with all the richness
of oral history and calls out the inner strength and wisdom of aging
women.
- The Darkover
novels
by Marion Zimmer Bradley
I am so sad that she's gone and there will never be another.
- The Amelia
Peabody novels of Elizabeth Peters
Amelia is a fully liberated Victorian woman "Egyptologist," and the
series is vastly entertaining and has on occasion brought me to laughing
out loud while sitting in the airport waiting for a delayed flight.
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