Rafe Martin maintains an active schedule of appearances at libraries, schools, and Zen centers across the country. His works have been cited in Time, Newsweek, and USA Today. He was the 2008 recipient of the Empire State Award from the New York Library Association. The author of over 20 books including Birdwing, The Rough-Face Girl, and One Hand Clapping, he lives in Rochester, NY.
Endless Path:
“Oh, such stories and commentaries! They stand side by side with
the koans, the words and doings of the Zen masters of old and new,
and together with them help us rise above narrowness and know a
life of greater selflessness and affection, bringing peace to
ourselves and the world. Svaha! Nine bows to Rafe Martin.”
—Danan Henry Roshi, founder and spiritual director of the Zen
Center of Denver
“Rafe Martin’s retelling of the ancient jataka tales, and his
insightful commentaries that relate the stories to our daily lives
and the paramitas, is an inspiration. We hear a new voice here from
the old storyteller and it brings great joy!”
—Susan Ji-on Postal Sensei, teacher and spiritual director of the
Empty Hand Zen Center, New Rochelle, NY
“Endless Path is a gem. Martin’s enthusiasm for the jatakas leaps
off each page, bringing the reader into a realm where the deepest
truths are revealed by even the most humble creatures. This book
should be required reading for all Buddhist practitioners—actually,
for everyone!”
—Sunyana Graef Sensei, Zen teacher and spiritual director of the
Vermont Zen Center
“Reading Endless Path, I can actually hear a familiar voice coming
alive, telling me stories of the Buddha’s lives. The world I enter
is vast, wonderful, inspiring! I love this book!!”
—Hogen Bays Roshi, leader of Zen Community of Oregon and co-abbot
of Great Vow Zen Monastery
“Endless Path is a treasure for all seekers of the Way! Rafe Martin
relates wondrous ancient Buddha stories and then unravels them,
delivering meaning for today’s Western lay practitioners. A
much-needed integration of the awesome past and our perplexing
present. And a delightful read.”
—Roshi Pat Enkyo O’Hara, abbot of The Village Zendo, guiding
spiritual teacher for the New York Center for Contemplative Care,
and co-spiritual director of the Zen Peacemaker Family
“[Endless Path] aptly describes Zen Practice—the cultivating of the
field of the mind: coming to Awakening and bringing that
realization to manifest in our behavior, thought and speech… It is
a book worth reading no matter where you are in your practice.”
—Ven. Mitra Bishop, Abbot of Mountain Gate in Northern New Mexico,
Spiritual Director of Hidden Valley Zen Center in San Marcos CA,
and contributing editor of The Oak Tree in the Garden
“As I work with designing the final pages done for Endless Path, I
am struck with how much this book is a book of inspiration—a book
to inspire others on the Buddhist path. … So many, many fine
Buddhist books instruct, teach, even offer enlightened glimpses
into the teachings. But Endless Path will be a truly helpful book,
in the sense of Avalokiteshvara’s thousand outstretched hands, to
fill those who read it with real heart’s yearning, rededicated
commitment, and excitement for the possibility—the endless path—it
offers.”
—Richard Wehrman, illustrator and designer
“Zen practitioner and storyteller Rafe Martin’s Endless Path casts
jatakas in a contemporary vernacular style. Describing the book as
a ‘kind of Zen take’ on the jatakas, he organizes it into chapters
focusing on the ten paramitas, or Buddhist practices of perfection,
presenting each tale in relation to a particular paramita. His
commentaries on each story interweave quotes from sutras and a wide
range of other sources such as Gary Snyder, Dogen, William Blake,
Ikkyu, and even Wikipedia. Martin brings to the discussion an
important awareness of how jatakas help cultivate a Buddhist vision
of the universe.”
—Buddhadharma
"Endless Path is for students of Buddhism, Dharma teachers, and
anyone with an interest in viewing one’s journey through life as an
opportunity for spiritual awakening. … With humor and elegance,
[Rafe Martin] invites his readers to use the stories as a mirror.
He shows us the dangers of self-centeredness and how making a
commitment to morality is the foundation of practice. … He reminds
us that we can take responsibility both for our formal practice of
sitting meditation and for the ‘ongoing actualization of the
precepts and paramitas in the ordinary events of our lives.’”
—Parabola
“As a skilled Zen practitioner and teacher, Martin is in an ideal
position to help bring the truths of Buddhism alive, which he does
with admirable ease. He also acknowledges the role played by many
different communities of listeners in refining how he tells the
tales and reveals the insights that he and others have gained from
each one… Endless Path is a truly insightful work… Accessible,
inspired, and clearly marked by a generosity and foresight of
spirit, it is a work well worth obtaining and keeping in one’s own
private collection.”
—BookPleasures.com
“With Endless Path, Martin has found 10 Jataka tales that relate
directly to the 10 paramitas (also known as the 10 perfections)… he
brings them off the children’s shelf and into the lives of every
modern-day Buddhist, young and old… Rafe Martin breathes fresh new
life into these wonderful old tales, and in doing so, provides us
with a much-needed perspective into our individual lives and
practice… I wholeheartedly recommended this book to any
practitioner out there.”
—Adam, Fly Like a Crow
“Endless Path weaves together story, myth, and meaning to reveal
the practical power of imagination in our spiritual development and
everyday life.”
—Spiritual Media Blog
“Martin retells each [jataka] tale, keeping the general story line,
and often adding a Zen twist… After the story, Martin presents a
teisho, a formal presentation of the teachings, expounding on how
this particular tale bears on one of the ten paramitas. Each teisho
is chock full of nondual wisdom, references to Zen koans and
indigenous storytelling traditions and classical Buddhist
teachings… Really energetic, living Dharma here.”
—The Big Old Oak Tree
“Rafe’s ability to retell the [jataka] stories draw the reader into
an almost ‘round the fire’ type of feeling. I can picture numerous
folks, throughout the years, passing these stories around. His
mastery of storytelling transports one into this very setting, cozy
and comfortable… If you are looking to take a break from the
academic books on Buddhism you have your nose buried in, then
Endless Path is not only the book to read, it’s a great one! Each
story represents an opportunity to contemplate the true meaning of
compassion and kindness in a way that is not only fun, but truly
enjoyable.”
—Precious Metal
“Imagine this book morphing into a real-life friend: it will make
for an earnest and sincere Buddhist companion… For it is a book
that comes to life, made accessible to modern (in particular,
Western) readers by its affable readability, honest humour and
grounded sentiments… Martin’s retelling of the Jataka tales is
engaging and accessible, while importantly preserving the stories’
elemental guiding inspirations… The commentaries fluidly connect
the dots between the paramitas, and are markedly grounded in the
reality of daily living.”
—Moonpointer
“Read this book. You'll be glad you did… In each chapter, Martin
retells a jataka and then explores how the tale illuminates and
exemplifies one of the paramitas. This approach reminds me a
somewhat of the way in which John Tarrant, Roshi, works with koans,
turning and examining them from different perspectives, seeing
where they are clear and where opaque. Through meticulous
examination, Martin reveals how the paramitas and the jatakas
function to support an upright, wholesome life… Not many Buddhist
authors incorporate, as Martin does, references to Lady Gaga, The
Talking Heads, Jack Kerouac, and Elvis into their commentaries…
Endless Path provides a fine guidebook.”
—Ox Herding
“Rafe Martin’s book, Endless Path, is a continuation of Martin’s
decades-long immersion in storytelling and the Jataka tales. … Each
of the ten stories, one for each of the paramitas (perfections), is
accompanied by an illustration and an engaging commentary on both
the story and the paramita. … The stories in [Endless Path] are
like returning to the enchantment of childhood, where anything and
everything is possible, except that here we see the possibility of
mature wisdom and kindness, in the world and in ourselves.”
—Inquiring Mind
“Rafe Martin is an exquisite story-teller, not only for his
transmission of the story itself but for his magical ability to
turn us into the storyline. … And, the amazing artwork by Richard
Wehrman is captivating and fires the imagination.”
—108 Zen Books
Also by Rafe Martin:
The Banyan Deer:
“The Banyan Deer shows that the lives of all living beings are
equally important.”
—His Holiness the Seventeenth Karmapa, Ogyen Trinley Dorje
“A sweet and sensitive story of courage, sacrifice, and
kindness.”
—Dan Millman, author of The Way of the Peaceful Warrior
Birdwing:
“Extraordinary … The marvelous thing about Birdwing is that, given
its highly literary origins, it is so tough, colloquial, funny and
moving.”
—A Washington Post Year’s Best Books
“Martin deftly weaves fairy tale into fiction … The many original
characters and unusual adventure scenes ensure that readers will
remember this well-paced fantasy.”
—Booklist
The Rough-Face Girl:
“A welcome rediscovery of an American Indian Cinderella variant
whose heroine is both a religious mystic and a seeker after true
love.”
—Newsweek on The Rough Face Girl
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