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Siddhartha

By: Hermann Hesse
Binding: Paperback
Publisher: Picador
ISBN: 033035485X
ISBN-13: 9780330354851
Released: 06 Mar 1998
RRP: £7.99
Average Rating:

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Customer Reviews

The River Laughs - By: Oliver Redfern, 18 May 2008
This allegorical tale of a Brahmin's son who gives up everythingin the search for his self is,in my opinion, one of the masterpieces of the 20th century. The story is short & clear, with one footin Buddhism & anotherin Modernism. The first time I read this book (during one sittingin a Toronto cafe), I fellin love with it. Now, after reading it for the second time, I feel as if it will be the book I keep by my side, through out my life, for whenever I need to be comforted.

If you feel lost, depressed, unhappy or unsure about lifein general, this book is worth a thousand self-help tomes injected into your blood.
You get back far more than what you put in - By: N. Gilmartin, 03 Jul 2007
I read this bookin German (oh, hark at me!) but the languagein it is so beautifully simple that I am sure the English translation provides an accurate rendering of the original.

I would recommend Siddhartha to everyone. The fairy-tale-like atmosphere it evokes & its simple prose make it immediately accessible, & its brevity makes it readable even for those who are not otherwise avid readers.

The messagein it is deceptively simple: the way to contentment liesin a full experience & acceptance of all aspects of life, a willing resignation to the fact that things as they are is the only way they can & must be. Neither the life of the body nor that of the mind should be neglected & rejected out-of-hand; indeed Siddhartha is only able to find a permanent & stable inner peace once he has experienced all manners of excess, showing that understanding demands familiarity with what is to be understood.

I can understand why some comments refer to the book's ability to have a life-changing effect, but this was not the case with me, perhaps because I could not help keeping a distance from the message. A few aspects of the story didn't sit right with me. Siddhartha's discovery of inner peace I could well understand, for his life had been filled with all manner of varied experiences; but was the same true of Vasudeva or Gotama? How were they able to experience that same level of enlightenment without having had the variety of experience that cannot be denied of Siddhartha? There are other contentious points I would like to raise but they relate to the book's end & I wouldn't want to spoil it for those who are yet to read it!

This is a gem of a book & a real rarity considering what you get out of so few pages.

Interesting work of fiction, but not a 'religious experience'! - By: A reader, 18 Dec 2006
The thing that makes this book interesting is that it is really an intellectualisation of Buddhist & Hindu thought. However, one thing I think got lostin translation is that the essential point of Buddhism is **practice** (meditation).

In the book, Siddhartha reaches realisation only when he lets go of everything, but how do you 'let go' of everything? You can't just think it - otherwise you end up with a fake smile pretending to be enlightened while having all the same problems you had before. The thing that stops you letting go of things is your mind - so you have to work on your mind, which is where practice comes in.

Another aspect of the book that I would take issue with is that it seems to be suggesting that it is a somehow 'new' & different philosophy from Buddhism (culminatingin the bizarre supporting role of the Buddhain the book). However,in reality from beginning to end every idea is found within Buddhism itself, with the ending of the book being a fictionalised account of realization. As for the fundamental 'journey', it has always been a part of Buddhism to recognise that the teachings will only get you so far.
Brilliant - By: , 24 Feb 2004
Hesse describes the spiritual development of Siddartha, a holy man who finds peace by discarding all doctrines & quest for knowledge &in stead becoming 'one' with the unity of the world & eternity.

Time is not real. Life is not about right or wrong, pleasure or suffering. Everything is a unity, with which all the components, ourselves including, flow & are one. Through great parts of his life, Siddartha seeks for his Selfin order to destroy it & find peace, only to discover that this is not the answer. Only when he realises that his self is also part of the great unity, does he find true peace & contentment, where happiness & suffering are one, but where love is the most important force of all.

Siddartha is like Buddha, just as holy & contented, but without the strict doctrines of religion. The story encompasses all the wonderful aspects of Buddhism, leaving the questionable ones behind (life is not all pain & suffering & desire is not all bad!). The reader is left spiritually & emotionally satisfied, no longer is search of the meaning of life.


a must read. - By: deadbeat, 03 May 2003
Of Hesse's works, this particular book stands out. A story about a boy who searches for inner-happiness, it is writtenin an almost biblical tone, & reveals to us a very holy, self-satisfying way of way of life. Indeed, one of the more important themes of the book is that for true happiness we have to search within ourselves. This theme can be traced throughout Hesse's ouvre, yetin Siddhartha it is shownin its most simple, & positive form.
One could say the book induces selfishness, yet I would argue this point. The river, a major focus of the book, represents the circle of life. It shows Siddhartha that life, thoughin constant flux, is essentially still the same, & encourages Siddhartha to become at one with that flux. Though Siddhartha had to look to himself to find happiness, its physical manifestation was exemplifiedin the Ferryman's dissappearance into the forest. He too ardently studied the river, but he departed, that he might embrace the whole of nature. This acceptance of nature's spectrum, this unparralled act of love for the world, tells us also that it is Siddhartha's ultimate aim.

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