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Monkey: The Journey To The West (1994)

Monkey: The Journey to the West (1994)

Book Info

Author
Rating
3.62 of 5 Votes: 5
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ISBN
0802130860 (ISBN13: 9780802130860)
Language
English
Publisher
grove press

About book Monkey: The Journey To The West (1994)

Yes, I know that's quite a claim to make! But this book actually deserves it. It's accessible, it's a ripping yarn, and quite simply it's an absolute joy to read. All this it achieves while balancing profundity and pure playfulness with a lightness and deftness of touch that leaves modern fantasists like Tolkien trailing in its wake. I realize that many people will feel I've just committed sacrilege. But... Well, like I said before, this book genuinely deserves such high praise.READ IT! Your life will be the richer for it.If you're after something a little more concrete, here's a brief - and spoiler free - summary...A 20th century translation of a 16th century Chinese classic, this book tells the story of one priest's journey from China to India to fetch Mahayana Buddhist scriptures. While it is very (and I do mean VERY) loosely based on an actual priest and an actual journey, that's really not the point. This is a richly mythologized account intended as fable, not history. Gods, demons, Buddhas and Bodhisattvas, and even Taoist immortals all get in on the action.As with so many tales of pilgrimage, the physical journey becomes an allegory for something more. And because we are dealing with a Buddhist allegory, in this case the metaphor is for the journey towards enlightenment.The only qualifier I want to insert is that this is a review of the Arthur Waley translation of Monkey (or "Journey to The West" as it is known in China) in general. I have not seen the particular edition on sale here. Interestingly, I've even seen one edition subtitled "a folk novel of China". For modern, western readers at least, I'd consider that subtitle highly misleading. This is no folk tale. It is a serious work of high culture - cleverly disguised as a fairy tale though it may be.Incidentally, I do realize that much of what I've just said may make this book sound somewhat dry and ponderous. Religious allegory? Serious work of high culture? Doesn't exactly sound like fun reading, does it? Yet nothing could be further from the truth. From a less skilled author and translator, religious allegory may indeed be reduced to dry sermonizing. Not so here.This book is, as I said in the beginning, an absolute joy to read.Theo.

3,5Uno dei quattro classici della letteratura cinese che avrei voluto leggere da molto tempo. Mi sono decisa soltanto ora perché sto portando avanti una sfida personale leggendo alcuni libri consigliati in Curarsi con i libri: Rimedi letterari per ogni malanno.Lo scimmiotto è consigliato alle persone che sono restìe ai cambiamenti e preferiscono condurre una vita serena, tranquilla e sicura.Non è che io abbia paura dei cambiamenti, però devono avvenire gradualmente, ho bisogno di tempo per prepararmici. I cambiamenti improvvisi, invece, m'innervosiscono e raramente mi lascio trascinare in cose fuori programma e non organizzate. In Curarsi con i libri le autrici si riferiscono anche ai cambiamenti interiori, ma di questi è impossibile aver paura visto che spesso siamo noi gli artefici di questi mutamenti e quindi sono cercati e voluti.Leggendo Lo scimmiotto non è cambiamento assolutamente niente nella mia vita, ma ho comunque letto un gran bel libro che comunque avrei voluto leggere. Mi sono divertita leggendo la vita del re scimmia Sun Wukong: dalla sua nascita al caos che ha provocato in Cielo, dal suo imprigionamento durato cinquecento anni sotto la Montagna dei Cinque Elementi fino al raggiungimento dell'illuminazione. L'altro personaggio che seguiamo sin dalla nascita è Tripitaka, un monaco buddhista, che è incaricato di andare in India a recuperare le Sacre Scritture per portarle in Cina e così insegnare la retta via.Tripitaka affronterà il suo viaggio con l'aiuto di tre discepoli, tutti bizzarri e singolari, e insieme affronteranno rocambolesche avventure dovendo superare montagne invalicabili, fiumi impetuosi e combattere contro draghi e mostri.Il loro viaggio simboleggia anche la via della consapevolezza: da una vita materiale e dedita ai piaceri a un percorso, non sempre facile, che conduce alla realizzazione. In questo senso la storia dello scimmiotto insegna che è possibile affrontare e superare le difficoltà e ciò conduce spesso a un cambiamento positivo del quale non c'è bisogno d'avere paura.

Do You like book Monkey: The Journey To The West (1994)?

I picked this up because I am interested in reading what other cultures consider essential reading - and this is one of the four Great Classical Novels of Chinese literature. It tells the tale of a priest's 17-year journey to pick up sacred scrolls from Bhudda in India. It also tells of his three disciples, one being Monkey, who is really the main character here. Monkey has great superpowers but also is kind of a dick. He has a bad temper, is super full of himself, and gets into the equivalent of hundreds of drunken bar fights. However, that all comes in handy, because on the way to India, our sacred priest runs into many demons, dragons, evil spirits, animal lords, and 40-foot white turtles. Monkey beats them all up, the scriptures are received, and there you go, Chinese folk lore is born.Most of the book is a pretty repetitive formula - they arrive at a town, some kind of magical evil has taken over the place, Monkey beats someone up thus fixing the problem, and they move on. Some of it is pretty funny however, and kind of surprising given the fact that this was written in the 16th century. At one point, Monkey and his gang break into a temple and eat all the prepared food. When they are discovered, they are mistaken for Gods, and the people beg them to give them sacred Holy Water. Monkey and his buds pee in vases and tell them it's Holy Water, and the people drink it! And all of this described in a very formal, 16th century style. I was cracking up. Toliet humor is so timeless. It was also interesting that the realm of Heaven is exactly like a typical bureaucratic government on Earth. There were offices, titles, paperwork, all operating in a fashion mirroring how we do things down here. All you really needed to visit Heaven was the proper passport. I admit to being a Godless heathen and judging their perception of heaven like it's a work of fiction but c'mon! Have some imagination! Even Scientology has aliens!All in all, I'm glad I read it, but it wasn't the most exciting thing in the world.
—Marc Kozak

One of the "Four Great Classical Novels" of Chinese literature, "Journey to the West" is the 16th-century embellishment of a 7th-century pilgrimage from China to India to retrieve Buddhist scriptures that will bring enlightenment to China. At the folklore level, this is a rollicking tale of misadventure and the clever solutions of the trickster Monkey that save the feckless priest Tripitaka and his frequently-unwilling cohorts, the foolish Pigsy and the obedient Sandy. As an allegory, Tripitaka is the everyman kept safe along his journey by genius and enlightenment represented by Monkey. As satire, the inscrutable (to Westerners, anyway!) Chinese character and values and the bureaucracy of heaven and earth are lovingly parodied--many of Monkey's solutions rely on the very connections and bureaucracy that got the pilgrims into the mess in the first place.Arthur Waley chose to translate 30 of the original 100 chapters of Wu Cheng'en's "Journey to the West." Waley's translation is fluid, scholarly, and readable. "Monkey" never feels abridged, perhaps due to the episodic nature of its stories and content. To anyone wishing to learn about Chinese culture, this book is an invaluable insight as well as an entertaining read.
—Carl Nelson

Monkey is a magical tale of fantasy and adventure in the Tang Dynasty (618–907) of imperial China. At around 350 pages, this translation is actually a short version of the 2,000-some-page Journey to the West, which was written in the 16th century. It is a very important book throughout Asia, and considered one of the four Great Classical Novels of Chinese literature. A Japanese friend of mine assures me that 98% of Asians know the story of Journey to the West whether through the book directly or its numerous spin-offs.Although Monkey is an abridgement, it doesn’t read like one. It really feels like a full story. Most of what was omitted consists of individual adventures along the pilgrims’ journey to India to fetch Buddhist scriptures. Since these mini adventures are largely self-contained, you don’t notice their absence when reading, although the ending does come off as somewhat abrupt.I’ve been wanting to read some Wuxia for a long time due to my personal interest in martial arts. Wuxia is basically Chinese martial fiction, and it is hard to find anything in this genre with less than 2,000 pages. I specifically chose this abridged version because I wanted to get a soft start rather than dive right into a 2,000-page brick only to give up. Though the translation is not perfect, the style is sometimes archaic and the ebook version contains some digital transfer errors, Monkey still fulfilled my expectations. And I expect this won’t be my last wuxia novel. Despite the drawbacks, I'm giving this five starts because I know I'm going to be thinking about this story for a long time.Note:While it definitely helps to first have some basic knowledge of Buddhist philosophy and terms (i.e., the difference between Buddhas, Bodhisattvas and Arhats) and the major figures (Guatama/Sakyamuni, Kwan Yin, Amitabha and the Taoist Lao Tzu), you could easily get by without any such prior knowledge and probably learn a good deal about Chinese beliefs simply by reading this book. Interesting trivia: Dragon Ball is based on Journey to the West. The Monkey King is called Sun Wukong in Chinese and Son Goku in Japanese. Hence the name of Goku in Dragon Ball, who is based on the Monkey King.
—Jim Peterson

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