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I'm a Buddhist monk. I research and translate.

Buddhist Tales for the Soul

In early 2010 I was asked by my friend Venerable Nakamura Gyōmyō to translate a collection of his short stories which were originally published in Japanese. I agreed and after many months of developing something of an ability to translate Japanese fiction into agreeable English, we finalized the manuscript at Shanti Stupa in Leh, Ladakh. It was earlier this month, December 2011, that the book finally went to print.


It is basically short stories with Buddhist themes, aimed at a teenage reading audience, though anyone who enjoys light fiction would enjoy it as well. Unlike my other translations, this is not specifically a dharma text, and thus the challenge was to be less academic in translating this work while taking out a poetic license to make the language work.

Publication details:

Nakamura Gyōmyō, Buddhist Tales for the Soul. New Delhi: Sterling Publishers Pvt.Ltd., 2012. (ISBN 978-81-207-6841-3)

The work is available on Amazon as a Kindle edition.

Print copies are available from the publisher.

4 comments:

Jayarava said...

For the soul? What soul?

Jeffrey Kotyk said...

There is no soul, but this is fiction, so we can make stuff up. That's the beauty of it. Actually a lot of Buddhist teachers throw the word soul around. Even Ajahn Brahm does with caveats.

Jayarava said...

Throwing the word soul around strikes me as a failure on several levels: a failure to come to terms with Buddhist metaphysics and doctrine, a failure to come to terms with Buddhist terminology, and a failure to fully commit to a Buddhist world view.

It is confusing to both vehemently deny that a soul exists, as Buddhists do, and then to irrationally sneak it in through the back door as a "fiction".

Even as fiction the word soul speaks of our tacit western eternalism and monism.

Jeffrey Kotyk said...

The word soul in a fictional context can just refer to one's inner sense of comfort and well-being. I think the author had that idea in mind.

This book isn't a dharma text. It isn't even strictly Buddhist, but just Buddhist-themed.

In any case, it is light reading and to be taken lightly.