ultimate journey richard bernstein

  • Writing, Research & Publishing Guides

Amazon prime logo

Enjoy fast, free delivery, exclusive deals, and award-winning movies & TV shows with Prime Try Prime and start saving today with fast, free delivery

Amazon Prime includes:

Fast, FREE Delivery is available to Prime members. To join, select "Try Amazon Prime and start saving today with Fast, FREE Delivery" below the Add to Cart button.

  • Cardmembers earn 5% Back at Amazon.com with a Prime Credit Card.
  • Unlimited Free Two-Day Delivery
  • Streaming of thousands of movies and TV shows with limited ads on Prime Video.
  • A Kindle book to borrow for free each month - with no due dates
  • Listen to over 2 million songs and hundreds of playlists
  • Unlimited photo storage with anywhere access

Important:  Your credit card will NOT be charged when you start your free trial or if you cancel during the trial period. If you're happy with Amazon Prime, do nothing. At the end of the free trial, your membership will automatically upgrade to a monthly membership.

Buy new: .savingPriceOverride { color:#CC0C39!important; font-weight: 300!important; } .reinventMobileHeaderPrice { font-weight: 400; } #apex_offerDisplay_mobile_feature_div .reinventPriceSavingsPercentageMargin, #apex_offerDisplay_mobile_feature_div .reinventPricePriceToPayMargin { margin-right: 4px; } -35% $12.36 $ 12 . 36 FREE delivery Monday, August 26 on orders shipped by Amazon over $35 Ships from: Amazon.com Sold by: Amazon.com

Return this item for free.

We offer easy, convenient returns with at least one free return option: no shipping charges. All returns must comply with our returns policy.

  • Go to your orders and start the return
  • Select your preferred free shipping option
  • Drop off and leave!

Save with Used - Good .savingPriceOverride { color:#CC0C39!important; font-weight: 300!important; } .reinventMobileHeaderPrice { font-weight: 400; } #apex_offerDisplay_mobile_feature_div .reinventPriceSavingsPercentageMargin, #apex_offerDisplay_mobile_feature_div .reinventPricePriceToPayMargin { margin-right: 4px; } $1.35 $ 1 . 35 $3.98 delivery August 26 - 27 Ships from: glenthebookseller Sold by: glenthebookseller

Kindle app logo image

Download the free Kindle app and start reading Kindle books instantly on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required .

Read instantly on your browser with Kindle for Web.

Using your mobile phone camera - scan the code below and download the Kindle app.

QR code to download the Kindle App

Image Unavailable

Ultimate Journey: Retracing the Path of an Ancient Buddhist Monk Who Crossed Asia in Search of Enlightenment

  • To view this video download Flash Player

Follow the author

Richard Bernstein

Ultimate Journey: Retracing the Path of an Ancient Buddhist Monk Who Crossed Asia in Search of Enlightenment Paperback – February 5, 2002

Purchase options and add-ons.

  • Print length 368 pages
  • Language English
  • Publication date February 5, 2002
  • Dimensions 5.19 x 0.83 x 8 inches
  • ISBN-10 9780679781578
  • ISBN-13 978-0679781578
  • See all details

Popular titles by this author

Only in America: Al Jolson and The Jazz Singer

Editorial Reviews

From the inside flap, from the back cover, about the author, excerpt. © reprinted by permission. all rights reserved., ultimate journey, vintage books usa.

The plane from Hong Kong was nicer, newer, more up to international standardsthan Chinese planes in the days when I lived in Beijing as a journalist. But itstill had something about it?a certain stiff formality among the servicepersonnel, the solemnity of the Communist bureaucrats who were my travelingcompanions?that made me sense I was entering a different world. Going to Chinawas always entering a different world. We took off, and I saw the glisteningribbon of the Pearl River below, and Guangdong Province, a darkening green inthe twilight. It had been twenty-seven years since I made my first trip to Chinain the days when you had to walk across the bridge at Lowu between China andHong Kong and you went through passport control in a kind of farm shed placedwithin earshot of a commune pigsty. A lot had changed, most conspicuously theheralded opening of China to the outside world. Whether China would be open tome was what I would find out in just a few hours. Continues... Excerpted from Ultimate Journey by Richard Bernstein Copyright © 2002 by Richard Bernstein. Excerpted by permission. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher. Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ 0679781579
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group (February 5, 2002)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 368 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 9780679781578
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0679781578
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 9.6 ounces
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 5.19 x 0.83 x 8 inches
  • #943 in Buddhist History (Books)
  • #1,531 in General Asia Travel Books
  • #5,241 in Travel Writing Reference

About the author

Richard bernstein.

Discover more of the author’s books, see similar authors, read author blogs and more

Customer reviews

  • 5 star 4 star 3 star 2 star 1 star 5 star 46% 28% 7% 19% 0% 46%
  • 5 star 4 star 3 star 2 star 1 star 4 star 46% 28% 7% 19% 0% 28%
  • 5 star 4 star 3 star 2 star 1 star 3 star 46% 28% 7% 19% 0% 7%
  • 5 star 4 star 3 star 2 star 1 star 2 star 46% 28% 7% 19% 0% 19%
  • 5 star 4 star 3 star 2 star 1 star 1 star 46% 28% 7% 19% 0% 0%

Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.

To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.

  • Sort reviews by Top reviews Most recent Top reviews

Ultimate Journey

Retracing the Path of an Ancient Buddhist Monk Who Crossed Asia in Search of Enlightenment

  • Richard Bernstein

ultimate journey richard bernstein

In 629, the revered Buddhist monk Hsuan Tsang set out across Asia in search of the Ultimate Truth, and to settle what he called “the perplexities of my mind.” From the Tang dynasty capital at Xian through ancient Silk Road oases, over forbidding mountain passes to Tashkent, Samarkand, and the Amu-Darya River, across Pakistan to the holiest cities of India–and back again–his sixteen-year journey was beset with every hardship imaginable. Pilgrimage complete, Hsuan Tsang wrote an account of his trek that is still considered one of the classics of Chinese literature.

In 1998, Richard Bernstein, venerated journalist and Time magazine’s first Beijing bureau chief, retraced the steps of Hsuan Tsang’s long and sinuous route, comparing present and past. Aided by modern technology but hampered by language barriers, harried border crossings, hostile Islamic regimes, and the accidental U.S. bombing of the Chinese embassy in Belgrade, Bernstein follows the monk’s path not only in physical but in contemplative ways. Juxtaposing his own experiences with those of Hsuan Tsang, Bernstein has crafted a vivid account of two stirring adventures in pursuit of illumination. Inspiring and profoundly felt, Ultimate Journey is a marvelous amalgamation of travelogue and history, cultural critique and spiritual meditation.

Also by Richard Bernstein

Only in America

Related titles

Our top books, exclusive content and competitions. straight to your inbox..

Sign up to our newsletter using your email.

By clicking subscribe, I acknowledge that I have read and agree to Penguin Books New Zealand’s Terms of Use and Privacy Policy .

Thank you! Please check your inbox and confirm your email address to finish signing up.

ultimate journey richard bernstein

ULTIMATE JOURNEY: Retracing the Path of an Ancient Buddhist Monk Who Crossed Asia in Search of Enlightenment

Richard bernstein, ultimate journey: retracing the path of an ancient buddhist. , $26 (368pp) isbn 978-0-375-40009-4.

Reviewed on: 02/26/2001

Genre: Religion

Paperback - 368 pages - 978-0-679-78157-8

  • Apple Books
  • Barnes & Noble

More By and About this Author chevron_right

ultimate journey richard bernstein

Featured Religion Reviews

ultimate journey richard bernstein

We’re fighting to restore access to 500,000+ books in court this week. Join us!

Internet Archive Audio

ultimate journey richard bernstein

  • This Just In
  • Grateful Dead
  • Old Time Radio
  • 78 RPMs and Cylinder Recordings
  • Audio Books & Poetry
  • Computers, Technology and Science
  • Music, Arts & Culture
  • News & Public Affairs
  • Spirituality & Religion
  • Radio News Archive

ultimate journey richard bernstein

  • Flickr Commons
  • Occupy Wall Street Flickr
  • NASA Images
  • Solar System Collection
  • Ames Research Center

ultimate journey richard bernstein

  • All Software
  • Old School Emulation
  • MS-DOS Games
  • Historical Software
  • Classic PC Games
  • Software Library
  • Kodi Archive and Support File
  • Vintage Software
  • CD-ROM Software
  • CD-ROM Software Library
  • Software Sites
  • Tucows Software Library
  • Shareware CD-ROMs
  • Software Capsules Compilation
  • CD-ROM Images
  • ZX Spectrum
  • DOOM Level CD

ultimate journey richard bernstein

  • Smithsonian Libraries
  • FEDLINK (US)
  • Lincoln Collection
  • American Libraries
  • Canadian Libraries
  • Universal Library
  • Project Gutenberg
  • Children's Library
  • Biodiversity Heritage Library
  • Books by Language
  • Additional Collections

ultimate journey richard bernstein

  • Prelinger Archives
  • Democracy Now!
  • Occupy Wall Street
  • TV NSA Clip Library
  • Animation & Cartoons
  • Arts & Music
  • Computers & Technology
  • Cultural & Academic Films
  • Ephemeral Films
  • Sports Videos
  • Videogame Videos
  • Youth Media

Search the history of over 866 billion web pages on the Internet.

Mobile Apps

  • Wayback Machine (iOS)
  • Wayback Machine (Android)

Browser Extensions

Archive-it subscription.

  • Explore the Collections
  • Build Collections

Save Page Now

Capture a web page as it appears now for use as a trusted citation in the future.

Please enter a valid web address

  • Donate Donate icon An illustration of a heart shape

Ultimate journey

Bookreader item preview, share or embed this item, flag this item for.

  • Graphic Violence
  • Explicit Sexual Content
  • Hate Speech
  • Misinformation/Disinformation
  • Marketing/Phishing/Advertising
  • Misleading/Inaccurate/Missing Metadata

[WorldCat (this item)]

plus-circle Add Review comment Reviews

202 Previews

3 Favorites

Better World Books

DOWNLOAD OPTIONS

No suitable files to display here.

EPUB and PDF access not available for this item.

IN COLLECTIONS

Uploaded by Lotu Tii on December 20, 2011

SIMILAR ITEMS (based on metadata)

ultimate journey richard bernstein

  • Amazon international products are subject to separate terms and conditions and are sold from abroad by foreign sellers. Amazon’s products may differ from versions available in Canada, including configuration, age rating, product language, labelling and instructions.
  • The manufacturer’s warranty may not be valid in Canada.

Kindle app logo image

Download the free Kindle app and start reading Kindle books instantly on your smartphone, tablet or computer – no Kindle device required .

Read instantly on your browser with Kindle for Web.

Using your mobile phone camera, scan the code below and download the Kindle app.

QR code to download the Kindle app

Image Unavailable

Ultimate Journey: Retracing the Path of an Ancient Buddhist Monk Who Crossed Asia in Search of Enlightenment

  • To view this video, download Flash Player

Follow the author

Richard Bernstein

Ultimate Journey: Retracing the Path of an Ancient Buddhist Monk Who Crossed Asia in Search of Enlightenment Hardcover – March 13 2001

Purchase options and add-ons.

  • Print length 368 pages
  • Language English
  • Publisher Knopf
  • Publication date March 13 2001
  • Dimensions 17.15 x 3.18 x 24.77 cm
  • ISBN-10 0375400095
  • ISBN-13 978-0375400094
  • See all details

Product description

From amazon.

Richard Bernstein, a former New York Times correspondent in China (and now a book critic for that newspaper), follows Hsuan's trail in this outstanding narrative of his overland journey into the heart of Central Asia, a journey that takes him and the fortunate reader into places that few travelers are privileged to see--places, such as Kashgar and Samarkand, that have storied associations but that remain remote even in the age of CNN and fast jets. Though not without his fears and not without getting into a little trouble, Bernstein talks to just about everyone he meets along the way, pokes into little-known corners of history, and spins a wonderfully literate story of difficult travel that recalls such books as Robert Byron's Road to Oxiana and Bruce Chatwin's The Songlines . Anyone who has ever dreamed of seeing the Ganges River and the Taklimakan Desert will find much pleasure in Bernstein's pages. --Gregory McNamee

From Publishers Weekly

Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal

From booklist, from the inside flap, about the author, excerpt. © reprinted by permission. all rights reserved., product details.

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Knopf; First Edition (March 13 2001)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 368 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0375400095
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0375400094
  • Item weight ‏ : ‎ 726 g
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 17.15 x 3.18 x 24.77 cm

About the author

Richard bernstein.

Discover more of the author’s books, see similar authors, read author blogs and more

Customer reviews

  • 5 star 4 star 3 star 2 star 1 star 5 star 47% 27% 7% 19% 0% 47%
  • 5 star 4 star 3 star 2 star 1 star 4 star 47% 27% 7% 19% 0% 27%
  • 5 star 4 star 3 star 2 star 1 star 3 star 47% 27% 7% 19% 0% 7%
  • 5 star 4 star 3 star 2 star 1 star 2 star 47% 27% 7% 19% 0% 19%
  • 5 star 4 star 3 star 2 star 1 star 1 star 47% 27% 7% 19% 0% 0%
  • Sort reviews by Top reviews Most recent Top reviews

Top reviews from Canada

There was a problem filtering reviews right now. please try again later..

ultimate journey richard bernstein

Top reviews from other countries

ultimate journey richard bernstein

  • Amazon and Our Planet
  • Modern Slavery Statement
  • Investor Relations
  • Press Releases
  • Amazon Science
  • Sell on Amazon
  • Supply to Amazon
  • Become an Affiliate
  • Protect & Build Your Brand
  • Sell on Amazon Handmade
  • Advertise Your Products
  • Independently Publish with Us
  • Host an Amazon Hub
  • Amazon.ca Rewards Mastercard
  • Shop with Points
  • Reload Your Balance
  • Amazon Currency Converter
  • Amazon Cash
  • Shipping Rates & Policies
  • Amazon Prime
  • Returns Are Easy
  • Manage your Content and Devices
  • Recalls and Product Safety Alerts
  • Registry & Gift List
  • Customer Service
  • Conditions of Use
  • Privacy Notice
  • Interest-Based Ads
  • Amazon.com.ca ULC | 40 King Street W 47th Floor, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, M5H 3Y2 |1-877-586-3230

You are using an outdated browser. Please upgrade your browser to improve your experience and security.

Hardcover Ultimate Journey: Retracing the Path of an Ancient Buddhist Monk Who Crossed Asia in Search of Enlightenment Book

ISBN: 0375400095

Ultimate Journey: Retracing the Path of an Ancient Buddhist Monk Who Crossed Asia in Search of Enlightenment

Full Star

Select Format

Select condition, recommended.

Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

Book Overview

In 629, the revered Buddhist monk Hsuan Tsang set out across Asia in search of the Ultimate Truth, and to settle what he called "the perplexities of my mind." From the Tang dynasty capital at Xian... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Related Subjects

Customer Reviews

Another winner from richard bernstein, not a travelogue, but an enjoyable pen-ultimate journey, great journey, popular categories.

  • Teen and Young Adult
  • Literature & Fiction
  • Mystery & Thriller
  • Sci-fi & Fantasy
  • Large Print Books
  • Rare & Collectible Books
  • ShareBookLove
  • Educator Benefits
  • Librarian Benefits
  • e-Gift Cards
  • View Mobile Site
  • Shopping Cart
  • Order History

Partnerships

  • Library Program
  • Help & Support
  • Shipping Costs
  • Return Policy
  • Website Suggestions
  • Our Purpose
  • Social Responsibility
  • Testimonials

ultimate journey richard bernstein

  • Religion & Spirituality
  • Other Religions

Buy new: .savingPriceOverride { color:#CC0C39!important; font-weight: 300!important; } .reinventMobileHeaderPrice { font-weight: 400; } #apex_offerDisplay_mobile_feature_div .reinventPriceSavingsPercentageMargin, #apex_offerDisplay_mobile_feature_div .reinventPricePriceToPayMargin { margin-right: 4px; } £29.11 £ 29 . 11 FREE delivery 30 August - 3 September Dispatches from: Smaller World Future Sold by: Smaller World Future

Save with used - very good .savingpriceoverride { color:#cc0c39important; font-weight: 300important; } .reinventmobileheaderprice { font-weight: 400; } #apex_offerdisplay_mobile_feature_div .reinventpricesavingspercentagemargin, #apex_offerdisplay_mobile_feature_div .reinventpricepricetopaymargin { margin-right: 4px; } £2.19 £ 2 . 19 £2.80 delivery 23 - 27 august dispatches from: world of books ltd sold by: world of books ltd.

Kindle app logo image

Download the free Kindle app and start reading Kindle books instantly on your smartphone, tablet or computer – no Kindle device required .

Read instantly on your browser with Kindle for Web.

Using your mobile phone camera - scan the code below and download the Kindle app.

QR code to download the Kindle App

Image Unavailable

Ultimate Journey: Retracing the Path of an Ancient Buddhist Monk Who Crossed Asia in Search of Enlightenment

  • To view this video download Flash Player

Follow the author

Richard Bernstein

Ultimate Journey: Retracing the Path of an Ancient Buddhist Monk Who Crossed Asia in Search of Enlightenment Hardcover – 1 Mar. 2001

Purchase options and add-ons.

  • Print length 352 pages
  • Language English
  • Publisher Alfred a Knopf Inc
  • Publication date 1 Mar. 2001
  • Dimensions 17.15 x 3.18 x 24.77 cm
  • ISBN-10 0375400095
  • ISBN-13 978-0375400094
  • See all details

Product description

From the inside flap, about the author, product details.

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Alfred a Knopf Inc; First Edition (1 Mar. 2001)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 352 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0375400095
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0375400094
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 17.15 x 3.18 x 24.77 cm

About the author

Richard bernstein.

Discover more of the author’s books, see similar authors, read author blogs and more

Customer reviews

  • 5 star 4 star 3 star 2 star 1 star 5 star 51% 29% 0% 20% 0% 51%
  • 5 star 4 star 3 star 2 star 1 star 4 star 51% 29% 0% 20% 0% 29%
  • 5 star 4 star 3 star 2 star 1 star 3 star 51% 29% 0% 20% 0% 0%
  • 5 star 4 star 3 star 2 star 1 star 2 star 51% 29% 0% 20% 0% 20%
  • 5 star 4 star 3 star 2 star 1 star 1 star 51% 29% 0% 20% 0% 0%

Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings, help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.

To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyses reviews to verify trustworthiness.

  • Sort reviews by Top reviews Most recent Top reviews

Top review from United Kingdom

There was a problem filtering reviews right now. please try again later..

ultimate journey richard bernstein

Ultimate journey

Retracing the path of an ancient buddhist monk who crossed asia in search of enlightenment, by bernstein, richard.

  • 0 Want to read
  • 0 Currently reading
  • 0 Have read

Ultimate journey by Bernstein, Richard

Preview Book

My Reading Lists:

Use this Work

Create a new list

My book notes.

My private notes about this edition:

Check nearby libraries

  • Library.link

Buy this book

"Richard Bernstein's story of his long journey through Asia is at once a memoir of adventurous travel and a record of cultural discovery and spiritual quest.".

"In the year 629, a greatly revered Chinese Buddhist monk, Hsuan Tsang, set out across Asia in search of the Buddhist Truth, to settle what he called the "perplexities of my mind." Nearly a millenium and a half later, Richard Bernstein retraces the monk's steps: from the Tang dynasty capital at Xian through ancient Silk Road oases, over forbidding mountain passes to Tashkent, Samarkand, and the Amu-Darya River, across Pakistan to the holiest cities of India - and back.".

"Ultimate Journey is a vivid, profoundly felt account of two stirring adventures - one in the past and one in the present - in pursuit of illumination."--BOOK JACKET.

Previews available in: English

Showing 2 featured editions. View all 2 editions?

Add another edition?

Book Details

Edition notes.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Classifications

External links.

  • Contributor biographical information
  • Sample text
  • Publisher description

The Physical Object

Source records, community reviews (0).

  • Created April 1, 2008
  • 14 revisions

Wikipedia citation

Copy and paste this code into your Wikipedia page. Need help?

INTRODUCTION Ultimate Journey Retracing the Path of an Ancient Buddhist Monk Who Crossed Asia in Search of Enlightenment By RICHARD BERNSTEIN Knopf Read the Review My doctrine is to think the thought that is unthinkable, to practice the deed that is not performable, to speak the speech that is inexpressible, and to be trained in the discipline that is beyond discipline.
— The Sutra in Forty-two Sections

At first, searching for a way to satisfy the common desire to get away from it all, I thought I might teach myself to make Shaker furniture. I owned a small farmhouse in upstate New York that seemed suitable for the purpose, and I started to look at miter saws and chisel sets and flip through do-it-yourself manuals in hardware stores. I imagined myself in the workshop patiently crafting mortise-and-tenon joints while Glenn Gould played unaccompanied harpsichord music by J. S. Bach in the background.

Before I began to build my fantasy woodworking shop, however, I started, as I have before, to scrutinize maps and to think about a trip. Not just any trip, not some two-week sojourn in Italy or even a longer, farther-flung journey to, say, Angkor Wat or Borobudur. I was thinking about a particular trip, one that I had had in mind for a long time but for a variety of reasons (soon to be disclosed) had never undertaken. It was a sort of pilgrimage overland from China to India and back along the route of a Chinese Buddhist monk who went that way in the seventh century in search of the Truth.

The monk's name was Hsuan Tsang, and I think of him as the greatest traveler in history. He is far from a household name in the West, but he is certainly one in the East; in China and India he has had both historic and mythic standing for many centuries. I learned about him a long time ago, so long ago in fact that I don't remember exactly when, but no doubt at some point during the period in my life when I was what is rather grandly called a China expert. I started out in the China field as a graduate student at Harvard, where I studied the Chinese language and Chinese history under the legendary John K. Fairbank. Then, having realized that the academic life was not for me, I went to work for Time magazine, which sent me to Hong Kong in the days when that was as close as most Americans could get to China itself. China and the United States normalized diplomatic relations in 1979, and Time sent me to Beijing in 1980 to open its bureau there, the first the magazine had had in China since the Communists came to power in 1949.

It was thrilling to be in China in those years, even if the country was still a poverty-stricken police state kept down by the heavy hand of a Maoist dictatorship. China wasn't so much an ordinary country as it was an extraordinary universe, a domain of everything, from architectural ruins to moral-political theater, and because it had been closed for several decades, it was a self-contained universe due for rediscovery. I think it is fair to say that for most of the Western journalists there at the time—many of whom had studied Chinese in school before arriving—China was more a vocation than just another stop in a career as a foreign correspondent. China was all we talked about, China present but also China past, the China whose most powerful leader expectorated into a porcelain spittoon during ceremonies of state and the China of arched marble bridges and the Temple of Heaven.

When the country, under its post-Mao paramount leader Deng Xiaoping, instituted the economic reforms that are now among the wonders of the world, it quickly became clear that the China of old was soon going to vanish, and this created more than the usual amount of antiquarian interest among the relatively small contingent of foreigners who lived in Beijing then. We used to roam the city's antique shops and the small lanes of its ancient neighborhoods. We looked upon the old men with wispy beards walking their finches in cages early in the morning and the tiny ladies with bound feet and black pajamas as relics. And we created a minor cult over certain books that described what the country had been like before we got there, feeling envious of those who had known a far older China than we could know.

One of the books, for example, The Years That Were Fat by George N. Kates, described the monuments, the gates, the walls, the temples, the moon-viewing pavilions, the itinerant peddlers and their chants, the streetside operas, and the shadow puppet shows that had already mostly disappeared. Another book, less widely read, but known to a few of us, was Monkey, or Journey to the West , a sixteenth-century novel by one Wu Cheng-en. It was the highly fanciful account of an expedition to India made by a Buddhist monk in the company of a five-hundred-year-old monkey of supernatural powers. And some of us knew of the historical monk, Hsuan Tsang himself, whose actual journey to what he called "the West" took place from 629 to 645. The monk's own account of his journey, whose full title is The Great Tang Chronicles of the Western World , translated into English in the nineteenth century by a British clergyman-scholar named Samuel Beal, is regarded as one of the great classics of Chinese literature. In India, his chronicle is a major source of information on medieval Indian history. There are hundreds of stories, novels, plays, and operas based on Hsuan Tsang's journey in search of the Truth. There is probably not a single educated Chinese, and there are probably very few educated Indians, who do not know who he was.

Hsuan Tsang went on horseback, on camel-back, on elephant-back, or on foot from the ancient capital of Chang-an (today's Xian) all the way to southern India, a distance of roughly five thousand miles, and then back via a somewhat different route, crossing the harshest deserts and the tallest mountains in the world in both directions. His purpose was to search out what he called the Law, the original classics of Buddhist thought that would enable Chinese Buddhism, a doctrine borrowed from India in a language very foreign to China, to be put on an authentic footing. In other words, Hsuan Tsang wanted to shatter the illusory facade of the world of appearances and penetrate the diamond-hard innermost heart of Reality itself. When he returned to China he wrote, at the express demand of the emperor, about the countries he had visited on his journey, the emperor's purpose being to collect information of potential use in formulating China's military and foreign policies. But while the monk performed that task for his emperor, his concern was with an India that for him stood as the source of supreme wisdom. He went there to achieve the exalted understanding, what he saw as the Ultimate Truth, that alone permits us to achieve the purpose of Buddhism, which is the cessation of otherwise inevitable and inescapable suffering.

That was not my purpose, or at least not what I thought I might achieve. I too wish for a cessation of suffering, and I accept, at least in theory, the Buddhist proposition that the conventional pursuit of happiness leads to endless striving, frustration, and disappointment. But the Ultimate Truth is a more Buddhist thing than a secular non-Buddhist skeptic like me could strive for. What interested me about the monk's great pilgrimage was simply the beauty of his quest and the magnitude of his achievement. It seemed to me that his exploit was even more impressive than that of another figure of enduring fascination for me, Marco Polo, who came along six hundred years later. I take nothing away from the great Italian, but Hsuan Tsang's trip was almost as long and more arduous, and its goal, unlike Polo's, was not riches or renown but wisdom, a benefit for all humankind.

Years ago, a good friend of mine, John Wheeler, a former graduate school roommate who is now vice president of the Japan Society in New York, was talking about the great Buddhist monuments of Asia. At one extremity, he said, is the great Horyuji Temple in Nara, Japan. On the other side are Ellora and Ajanta, about eight thousand miles away in western India. In between are others, including the Mogao Caves at Dunhuang, which had just been reopened to foreign visitors. "Dunhuang stands temporally and geographically midway between Ellora in the west and Horyuji in the east," he said.

That remark stuck with me. The existence of an immensely long strand of Buddhist pearls stretching from the west of India to Japan inflamed my mind. It was magnificent, a great human achievement, the work of thousands of devotees performed over a thousand years. Here was Buddhism, founded by an obscure prince from the North Indian Plain, brought by merchants and monks across thousands of miles of the most forbidding terrain on the globe, and producing one of the most remarkable series of monuments on earth. The Buddha had seen in the Four Noble Truths that the usual strivings of humankind for pleasure and wealth inevitably led to suffering, and that the antidote to that suffering was to understand that the self, as it is normally experienced, was an illusion. An escape from suffering lay not in worldly pleasure, in sex, wealth, or power, but in the quiet cultivation of one's own mind. And here was a simple monk, Hsuan Tsang, traveling the entire geographical-spiritual trajectory that existed up to his time (Horyuji was built a century or so later) and leaving behind him a detailed record of what he saw. I thought of Hsuan Tsang's trip as the ultimate journey along a path over icy mountains and through scorched deserts that was for a millennium the most important thoroughfare of commerce, conquest, and ideas in the world. I thought of it as the road of great events, the greatest event of all being the transmission of the revolutionary doctrine of Buddhism, from India, where it died out, to China, where it flourished, altering the inner lives of hundreds of millions of people. I wanted to go to the same places my pilgrim went, to stand where he had stood, to look at the desert and try to hear the sound of his footsteps echoing down the corridors of time. It is a romantic notion, I know, and maybe it sounds naive, hokey in our cynical age. But when it comes to the history of the spirit, I am a romantic. I believe in paying homage to the figures of the past who conceived the thoughts that have endured, and Hsuan Tsang was such a person. To reproduce his journey would be the trip of a lifetime.

As I say, I was not hoping to find Ultimate Truth. Nor does the literary device often used in the beginning of travel books apply to me, the idea that I was propelled to undertake the lonely rigors of a journey by some grave spiritual or romantic crisis, the collapse of my marriage, the loss of my job, perhaps the death of someone close to me, a life unraveling, falling apart. In truth, my life was not falling apart. I was experiencing no theatrical exigency. My yearning to get away derived from the banal conviction that I had crossed the bourn of fifty, and that some of the things I had promised myself I would do would remain undone if I didn't do them quickly. Along with that conviction came the dread thought that this was it, my life, this and nothing more, until the end, which suddenly seemed less hypothetical than it did when I was less than fifty. Among the things I had promised myself I would do one of these days were reading Proust in his entirety, sailing to Tahiti, writing a historical novel, spending a contemplative year learning to make Shaker furniture—and following the fabled Road of Great Events from China to India and back. One of my predecessors on the China-to-India route, the English writer Peter Fleming, began his classic News from Tartary of 1936 with the simplest possible explanation for his travel plans. We traveled, he wrote, "because we wanted to travel—because we believed, in the light of previous experience, that we should enjoy it." That more or less summed up matters for me too, with the important difference that Fleming was twenty-seven when he started his trip and I was twice that age, which made my situation less simple than his. I traveled because I wanted to travel and I thought that I would possibly enjoy it, surely enjoy having done it. Like many men of my age, I was experiencing a kind of quarrel with bourgeois life, bathed in its ease and pleasures but aware too of its smallness and ordinariness, its lack of excitement. Most of us middle-aged men are among that species of routinized, rationalized beings that Max Weber called "specialists without spirit, sensualists without heart." We start out idealists and we end up creatures of habit, more concerned about the state of the lawn than of the spirit. Yes, we say to ourselves, it would be nice to break away for a while, but who would walk the dog?

Working as a book critic for the New York Times, I could feel myself glued to a chair, and I wasn't reading Proust. I liked my job, which I regarded as more than a job; it was a privilege. Moreover, I come from a background that does not make it natural for me to take privilege for granted. My father and mother brought up my sister and me on a small chicken farm in a Connecticut town called East Haddam, which wasn't a bad way to get started in life. But I have no doubt that had the opportunities my parents, both of them Eastern European immigrants, made available to me been made available to them, they would have preferred book criticism to collecting eggs and feeding chickens and shoveling manure any old day. I live at that rare nexus of political freedom and material profusion wherein you can actually pay the rent sitting at home pronouncing on the quality of other people's writings. I have my gripes, including the sedentariness of it, but still, my life was pretty good, and I knew it.

The point is, do not expect any stories of personal devastation here, any tales of redemption from grief. Expect rather a story of a man whose biggest problem was an inability, having gotten to a certain point, to get further. This was true of work, where I was in danger of sliding all the way to a suddenly foreseeable retirement age without ever again doing anything physically demanding or adventurous. I liked being a book critic, but I missed getting out and discovering the world, which, when I was younger, is what I thought I would do until I got old.

Then there was love, where I was also comfortably inert. Some years before I began thinking about getting away for a while, I attended a movie screening in New York to write an article for the Times , and, looking across the proverbial crowded room, I saw an Asian woman who corresponded to my romantic ideal. She wore a satiny long skirt and a black knit top and she had long hair clipped just beneath the back of her head and allowed to cascade downward to her waist. Her name was Zhongmei Li, and she told me she was a classical dancer who had moved from Beijing to New York a couple of years earlier. We began to see each other, and when I was contemplating Shaker furniture versus the China-India road we were seeing each other still, but in the way that was pathetically habitual for me—without decisiveness on my part. I wanted to move ahead, but something stopped me, as something had stopped me before when I faced other prospects for full romantic attachment (or as this is more directly put, marriage). The result was that I remained what the Talmud calls half a man, a man who had never acquired a wife or had children.

This is such an ordinary problem for so many Talmudically defined half-men in urban America these days that it seems hardly worthy of note. But I am trying to account for myself in these pages, to explain the nature of my two-thirds-of-the-way-through-life malaise, my something-less-than-a-crisis, something-short-of-contentment state of the spirit. There was no danger that I would have a fatal accident while shaving or even that I would knock people's hats off in the fashion of Melville's Ishmaelas I roamed the island of the Manhattoes. It was not exactly a drizzly November in my soul, but I did find myself unaccountably moody, difficult to please. I was snapping at the Times 's copy editors, who are probably the best copy editors in the world. On getting up in the morning, I was becoming less and less inclined to start reading a book. I couldn't shake off the sentiment that for a former foreign correspondent like myself, who had seen journalistic action in two dozen countries in Europe, Asia, and Africa, being a book critic was a bit like putting myself out to pasture.

It is, of course, unreasonable to expect or demand that daily life, and especially making a living, be an ongoing rhapsody. Yet I was beginning to feel that even the occasional possibility of a rhapsodic moment or two, a modest, occasional touch of the sublime, was eluding me. In addition, despite Zhongmei's welcome presence in my life, I was making no headway in resolving what in the conventional psychobabble is called commitment-phobia. I tried to deal with my normative unhappiness by lying on a couch and draining my brain in the presence of a psychoanalyst. But while the experience did not make me an opponent of Freudian therapy, it seemed an expensive indulgence. Cheaper and maybe more effective to buy a table saw and a drill press and a few books on woodworking, or to pick up a plane ticket to Xian. I knew that if I didn't do one or the other pretty soon, it would be too late. The question was: Which should it be?

My interest in Shaker furniture should not be underestimated. Nor, for that matter, should anyone think that I am especially enraptured by the idea of travel itself. When I was twenty-seven, like Peter Fleming, I wanted to do nothing else. But by the time I contemplated another long trip I had done enough of them to be aware of an almost inevitable disjunction between the romance of travel expectations and the loneliness and hardship of actual travel. A great part of travel, especially to places where you don't know anybody, consists of fatigue and lumpy mattresses and touts who cheat you and dinner by yourself in rooms full of people who are dining together. The Chinese have a saying: The wise man is he who can hear the dogs barking in the next village but has no desire to go there. Perhaps this is the same idea as in Blaise Pascal's celebrated pens?e about all human evil coming from man's inability to sit quietly in a room. Making Shaker furniture would be sitting quietly in a room; traveling through Central Asia along the route of a seventh-century Chinese monk would be going to see the dogs in the next village. On the other hand, there is Robert Louis Stevenson, who said, "The great affair is to move." Travel is hard, especially when it involves, as it did for Stevenson, the permanent relinquishment of the place where you belong. But travel that does not lead to that relinquishment can be, despite the reality cited above, the greatest escape from the mundane, from the oblivion of routine, that I know.

I had escaped before—wenty-nine years before, to be exact. In 1970, when I was still a student, I went overland from Paris to India, crossing Turkey, Iran, Afghanistan, and Pakistan on the way. It was the great adventure of my early adulthood, and involved grievous suffering, from homesickness and horniness and dysentery and mouse-sized cockroaches and hard wooden seats and anxiety about money and the solitude of the long-distance traveler. But I became, as it were, a man of the world on that trip, and I set my life on its future course, since it was then that I wrote my first published articles and was able to move, after some delays and false starts and a good deal of wasted time, toward fulfilling my ambition of becoming a journalist and a writer.

Here is where Hsuan Tsang seemed more pertinent than making a Shaker table. What appealed to me about woodworking was what I imagined to be the tranquillity of it, the concentration on the physical object—very different from the sedentary mental work that now occupied my professional days. But I knew that what I really wanted was another experience of foreign climes and distant shores, perhaps my last such experience. To reproduce Hsuan Tsang's journey, and to write my own version of his Chronicles , represented an opportunity for me to turn the clock back on myself, to recapture some of the freshness of my earlier years when, anxious and ambitious, I was just starting out. There was nostalgia in this, but there was also a test, a kind of dare that I could fulfill a promise I had made to myself, that I would never, even when I got older, get so settled that unusual adventure would become impossible. Not believing in reincarnation, believing that this is the only time I will exist on the planet, I wanted to go.

And yet for a long time, I didn't. This was for some years due to the simple fact that the mountain passes one needed to cross to go west from China were closed. They had served merchants, missionaries, pilgrims, diplomats, and armies for millennia, but for the first several decades of Communist rule in China they were shut. This was the case for the northern route through the Ili River Valley between China and Kazakhstan, as it was for the southern route via Tibet to Ladakh in what is now the Indian part of Kashmir; the same for the Oxus River route through the Wakhan Pass (which Marco Polo is supposed to have taken), for the Torugart Pass north of the historic city of Kashgar, for the Kunjerab Pass between China and Pakistan, and for the Bedel Pass to Kyrgyzstan, the pass the monk probably took on his way west.

In 1982, China and Pakistan opened the Kunjerab Pass for commercial traffic, and four years later they began allowing tourists and other travelers to cross between the two countries on that route. That was when I realized that for the first time in decades it was possible to go, as Peter Fleming had, overland from China to India. Still, the Kunjerab Pass was the wrong pass for me. It was not far south of the Wakhan Pass, which the monk took on his return to China, but it was very far from the Bedel Pass, his most likely mountain crossing point on his way west.

Then, in the mid-1990s, China and Kyrgyzstan opened another of the historic east—west crossings, the Torugart Pass, and that made a difference to me. The Torugart Pass, east of the Bedel Pass, is not the route that Hsuan Tsang took, but it covers almost identical terrain. Geographically it was close enough. And the Kunjerab Pass was close enough to Hsuan Tsang's actual return-trip route to make for an authentic reincarnation of his entire journey. In both cases, the geographic and the ethnic terrain would be basically the same as experienced by the monk.

Still I didn't go, or I couldn't go. I had a job, and it was not easy to leave it for the time required for such a long trip. Then, in 1996, a colleague of mine and I wrote a short foreign policy polemic that predicted a long period of conflict and rivalry between the United States and China. The book angered the Chinese authorities, who were just then trying to warm up the Sino-American relationship. Their response was so heated and vociferous that many diplomats and journalists whose opinions I trusted predicted I would never be allowed to travel in China again. The press in China instigated a mini—propaganda campaign against my coauthor, Ross H. Munro, and myself, declaring, among other things, that we were white supremacists who had fabricated evidence in our book. Some articles explicitly said that neither of us would ever get a visa to China again. Sure enough, a year or so after the publication of the book when I applied for a visa to travel to Xian and points west, I was turned down at the consulate in New York.

There are two ways to go to China. You can apply for a visa at a consulate, which means filling out a form giving a lot of personal history, your occupation, your place of birth, your previous visits to China. Or you can go to a travel agency in Hong Kong, where, for a somewhat elevated fee, you get a visa, no questions asked. No forms, no disclosures about the books you've written or your past history with China. But because these Hong Kong visas are issued without the approval of the Public Security Bureau in Beijing, there is always the possibility that your name will flash red on the computer screen at your point of entry in China and you will be sent packing. The visa problem was intensified by the fact that I needed to get into China twice to accomplish my purpose, once to begin the journey and again for the return trip via the Karakorum Highway from Pakistan.

Another problem: Whether I could get into China or not, all journalists were banned from what is officially called the Xinjiang Uigur Autonomous Region, a vast stretch of Chinese territory that includes the oasis towns at the edge of the Takla Makan Desert that the monk passed through on his journey. The Chinese were coping with a Muslim independence movement. Terrorists had bombed buses; arrests had been made and executions carried out. And, as is often the case in China, where there is trouble, foreign reporters are banned. In the summer of 1998, two reporters from Taiwan attempting to travel incognito in Xinjiang were picked up by the security police and jailed for a week before being expelled. If Taiwanese journalists were unable to escape detection, how would a sore-thumb Caucasian like me manage in Xinjiang?

Still, at a certain point, as the sports shoe slogan has it, you just have to do it. When I made my first global backpack expedition twenty-nine years before, I had had so much less hesitation. In those earlier times I didn't think so much about potential hazards or try to gather all of the answers to every conceivable question before I departed. Looking back on it, I was amazed at my boldness, and I wondered: Is it one of the characteristics of getting older that you feel you have to have absolute certainty about everything before you put your foot out the door? Life accumulates a kind of weight, like the pound you actually do put on every year. Maybe, I thought, retracing the route of my favorite pilgrim, I would make myself lighter, at least for a time. I asked myself the Existential Question. When I lie on my deathbed, what will I regret more: not having risked running into trouble or not having at least tried to take the Road of Great Events from China to India and back along the route traveled by a seventh-century Buddhist monk who was searching for the Truth?

The answer to that question is that I sent my passport to Hong Kong and got a visa to China through my usual travel agent there. My employers at the Times gave me just enough time off to complete the journey. I bought a cheap, nonrefundable round-trip ticket to Hong Kong. I had a six-hour layover there, during which time I bought a one-way ticket on China Northwest Airlines direct to Xian, Hsuan Tsang's starting point. At the last minute, and to my great joy, Zhongmei decided to travel with me for the first Chinese leg of the journey. She wanted to be in Xian to attempt to run interference for me if I ran into trouble with the Chinese bureaucracy. She would fly into China ahead of me and would meet me at the airport after passport control. It was an offer of amazing, eye-opening generosity, an act of love.

The plane from Hong Kong was nicer, newer, more up to international standards than Chinese planes in the days when I lived in Beijing as a journalist. But it still had something about it—a certain stiff formality among the service personnel, the solemnity of the Communist bureaucrats who were my traveling companions—that made me sense I was entering a different world. Going to China was always entering a different world. We took off, and I saw the glistening ribbon of the Pearl River below, and Guangdong Province, a darkening green in the twilight. It had been twenty-seven years since I made my first trip to China in the days when you had to walk across the bridge at Lowu between China and Hong Kong and you went through passport control in a kind of farm shed placed within earshot of a commune pigsty. A lot had changed, most conspicuously the heralded opening of China to the outside world. Whether China would be open to me was what I would find out in just a few hours.

(C) 2001 Richard Bernstein All rights reserved. ISBN: 0-375-40009-5

ultimate journey richard bernstein

Ultimate Journey: The Path of an Ancient Buddhist Monk

Richard Bernstein discussed his book Ultimate Journey: Retracing the Path of an Ancient Buddhist Monk Who Crossed Asia in Search of Enlighte … read more

Richard Bernstein discussed his book Ultimate Journey: Retracing the Path of an Ancient Buddhist Monk Who Crossed Asia in Search of Enlightenment , published by Knopf. In the book, Mr. Bernstein describes his journey following in the footsteps of Hsuan Tsang, a Chinese Buddhist monk, who in the 7th century made his way from China to India and back in 17 years. According to Mr. Bernstein, Hsuan Tsang’s trip was a remarkable journey because of the importance and impact it had for future generations in China as well as the cultures he encountered. The same journey took Richard Bernstein a couple of months and he discussed the emotions he experienced and what he learned in his meetings with people in the countries he visited. The author ended the event by answering questions from members of the audience. close

Javascript must be enabled in order to access C-SPAN videos.

  • Text type Text People Graphical Timeline
  • Filter by Speaker All Speakers Richard Bernstein Page Salazar
  • Search this text

*This text was compiled from uncorrected Closed Captioning.

People in this video

ultimate journey richard bernstein

Hosting Organization

  • Freer and Sackler Galleries of the Smithsonian Freer and Sackler Galleries of the Smithsonian

Airing Details

  • Apr 14, 2001 | 9:55pm EDT | C-SPAN 2
  • Apr 22, 2001 | 6:54pm EDT | C-SPAN 2
  • May 19, 2001 | 2:04pm EDT | C-SPAN 2
  • Aug 04, 2001 | 10:01am EDT | C-SPAN 2

Related Video

<em>Bhagavad Gita</em>

Bhagavad Gita

Mr. Mitchell, a translator of many ancient texts, talked about his most recent, The Bhagavad Gita: A New Translation , pu…

<em>Dawning of the Raj: Warren Hastings</em>

Dawning of the Raj: Warren Hastings

Jeremy Bernstein talked about his book Dawning of the Raj: The Life and Trials of Warren Hastings , published by Ivan R. …

<em>India: An Emerging Power</em>

India: An Emerging Power

Stephen Cohen discussed his book India: An Emerging Power . He answered viewers' questions.

<em>The Chan's Great Continent</em>

The Chan's Great Continent

Author and Historian Jonathan Spence talked about his book, “The Chan’s Great Continent: China in Western Minds.” The bo…

User Created Clips from This Video

A little buddhism goes a long way

User Clip: A little buddhism goes a long way

  • Sign in
  • My Account
  • Basket  

Items related to Ultimate Journey: Retracing the Path of an Ancient...

Ultimate journey: retracing the path of an ancient buddhist monk who crossed asia in search of enlightenment - softcover, bernstein, richard.

  • 3.48 3.48 out of 5 stars 111 ratings by Goodreads

9780679781578: Ultimate Journey: Retracing the Path of an Ancient Buddhist Monk Who Crossed Asia in Search of Enlightenment

This specific ISBN edition is currently not available.

  • About this title
  • About this edition

"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.

Richard Bernstein, a former New York Times correspondent in China (and now a book critic for that newspaper), follows Hsuan's trail in this outstanding narrative of his overland journey into the heart of Central Asia, a journey that takes him and the fortunate reader into places that few travelers are privileged to see--places, such as Kashgar and Samarkand, that have storied associations but that remain remote even in the age of CNN and fast jets. Though not without his fears and not without getting into a little trouble, Bernstein talks to just about everyone he meets along the way, pokes into little-known corners of history, and spins a wonderfully literate story of difficult travel that recalls such books as Robert Byron's Road to Oxiana and Bruce Chatwin's The Songlines . Anyone who has ever dreamed of seeing the Ganges River and the Taklimakan Desert will find much pleasure in Bernstein's pages. --Gregory McNamee

"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.

  • Publisher Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
  • Publication date 2002
  • ISBN 10  0679781579
  • ISBN 13  9780679781578
  • Binding Paperback
  • Number of pages 368

Convert currency

Shipping: FREE Within U.S.A.

Add to basket

Other Popular Editions of the Same Title

Featured edition.

ISBN 10:  0375400095 ISBN 13:  9780375400094 Publisher: Knopf, 2001 Hardcover

Top Search Results from the AbeBooks Marketplace

Ultimate journey: retracing the path of an ancient buddhist monk who crossed asia in search of enlightenment.

Quantity: 1 available

Seller: Books Unplugged , Amherst, NY, U.S.A.

Seller Rating:

Condition: New. Buy with confidence! Book is in new, never-used condition 0.5. Seller Inventory # bk0679781579xvz189zvxnew

Contact seller

Seller: Saucony Book Shop , Kutztown, PA, U.S.A.

Soft cover. Condition: New. 1st Edition. Stiff color pictorial wraps. New/as issued. 1st ptg. Size: 8vo - over 7�" - 9�" tall. Book. Seller Inventory # 055465

Ultimate Journey : Retracing the Path of an Ancient Buddhist Monk Who Crossed Asia in Search of Enlightenment

Quantity: 5 available

Seller: GreatBookPrices , Columbia, MD, U.S.A.

Condition: New. Seller Inventory # 412037-n

Ultimate Journey: Retracing the Path of an Ancient Buddhist Monk Who Crossed Asia in Search of Enlightenment [Paperback] Bernstein, Richard

Quantity: Over 20 available

Seller: Lakeside Books , Benton Harbor, MI, U.S.A.

Condition: New. Brand New! Not Overstocks or Low Quality Book Club Editions! Direct From the Publisher! We're not a giant, faceless warehouse organization! We're a small town bookstore that loves books and loves it's customers! Buy from Lakeside Books!. Seller Inventory # OTF-S-9780679781578

Ultimate Journey: Retracing the Path of an Ancient Buddhist Monk Who Crossed Asia in Search of Enlightenment (Paperback or Softback)

Seller: BargainBookStores , Grand Rapids, MI, U.S.A.

Paperback or Softback. Condition: New. Ultimate Journey: Retracing the Path of an Ancient Buddhist Monk Who Crossed Asia in Search of Enlightenment 0.67. Book. Seller Inventory # BBS-9780679781578

Seller: Books Puddle , New York, NY, U.S.A.

Condition: New. Seller Inventory # 26826711

Seller: Lucky's Textbooks , Dallas, TX, U.S.A.

Condition: New. Seller Inventory # ABLIING23Feb2416190099589

Ultimate Journey: Retracing the Path of an Ancient Buddhist Monk Who Crossed Asia in Search of Enlightenment by Bernstein, Richard [Paperback ]

Seller: booksXpress , Bayonne, NJ, U.S.A.

Soft Cover. Condition: new. This item is printed on demand. Seller Inventory # 9780679781578

Ultimate Journey (Paperback)

Seller: Grand Eagle Retail , Wilmington, DE, U.S.A.

Paperback. Condition: new. Paperback. In 629, the revered Buddhist monk Hsuan Tsang set out across Asia in search of the Ultimate Truth, and to settle what he called the perplexities of my mind. From the Tang dynasty capital at Xian through ancient Silk Road oases, over forbidding mountain passes to Tashkent, Samarkand, and the Amu-Darya River, across Pakistan to the holiest cities of Indiaand back againhis sixteen-year journey was beset with every hardship imaginable. Pilgrimage complete, Hsuan Tsang wrote an account of his trek that is still considered one of the classics of Chinese literature.In 1998, Richard Bernstein, venerated journalist and Time magazines first Beijing bureau chief, retraced the steps of Hsuan Tsangs long and sinuous route, comparing present and past. Aided by modern technology but hampered by language barriers, harried border crossings, hostile Islamic regimes, and the accidental U.S. bombing of the Chinese embassy in Belgrade, Bernstein follows the monks path not only in physical but in contemplative ways. Juxtaposing his own experiences with those of Hsuan Tsang, Bernstein has crafted a vivid account of two stirring adventures in pursuit of illumination. Inspiring and profoundly felt, Ultimate Journey is a marvelous amalgamation of travelogue and history, cultural critique and spiritual meditation. In 629, the revered Buddhist monk Hsuan Tsang set out across Asia in search of the Ultimate Truth, and to settle what he called &quot;the perplexities of my mind.&quot; From the Tang dynasty capital at Xian through ancient Silk Road oases, over forbidding mountain passes to Tashkent, Samarkand, and the Amu-Darya River, across Pakistan to the holiest cities of India-and back again-his sixteen-year journey was beset with every hardship imaginable. Pilgrimage complete, Hsuan Tsang wrote an account of his trek that is still considered one of the classics of Chinese literature. In 1998, Richard Bernstein, venerated journalist and &quot;Time magazine&#039;s first Beijing bureau chief, retraced the steps of Hsuan Tsang&#039;s long and sinuous route, comparing present and past. Aided by modern technology but hampered by language barriers, harried border crossings, hostile Islamic regimes, and the accidental U.S. bombing of the Chinese embassy in Belgrade, Bernstein follows the monk&#039;s path not only in physical but in contemplative ways. Juxtaposing his own experiences with those of Hsuan Tsang, Bernstein has crafted a vivid account of two stirring adventures in pursuit of illumination. Inspiring and profoundly felt, Ultimate Journey is a marvelous amalgamation of travelogue and history, cultural critique and spiritual meditation. Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability. Seller Inventory # 9780679781578

Seller: California Books , Miami, FL, U.S.A.

Condition: New. Seller Inventory # I-9780679781578

There are more copies of this book

IMAGES

  1. ULTIMATE JOURNEY Retracing the Path of an Ancient Buddhist Monk Who

    ultimate journey richard bernstein

  2. Ultimate Journey: Retracing the Path of an Ancient Buddhist Monk Who

    ultimate journey richard bernstein

  3. Ultimate Journey : Retracing the Path of an Ancient Buddhist Monk Who

    ultimate journey richard bernstein

  4. Ultimate Journey: Retracing the Path of an Ancient Buddhist Monk Who

    ultimate journey richard bernstein

  5. Ultimate Journey: Retracing the Path of an Ancient Buddhist Monk Who

    ultimate journey richard bernstein

  6. ULTIMATE JOURNEY; Retracing the path of an Ancient Buddhist Monk Who

    ultimate journey richard bernstein

COMMENTS

  1. Ultimate Journey: Retracing the Path of an Ancient Buddhist Monk Who

    _The ultimate Journey_ retracing the path of an ancient buddhist monk who crosses asia in search of enlightment by richard bernstein I bought the book in HongKong several summers ago, as i waited for my Chinese visa, knowing this would be the last new English bookstore for awhile. It was a good choice, well written, interesting and really to ...

  2. Ultimate Journey by Richard Bernstein: 9780679781578

    About Ultimate Journey. In 629, the revered Buddhist monk Hsuan Tsang set out across Asia in search of the Ultimate Truth, and to settle what he called "the perplexities of my mind.". From the Tang dynasty capital at Xian through ancient Silk Road oases, over forbidding mountain passes to Tashkent, Samarkand, and the Amu-Darya River, across ...

  3. Ultimate Journey: Retracing the Path of an Ancient Buddhist Monk Who

    Juxtaposing his own experiences with those of Hsuan Tsang, Bernstein has crafted a vivid account of two stirring adventures in pursuit of illumination. Inspiring and profoundly felt, Ultimate Journey is a marvelous amalgamation of travelogue and history, cultural critique and spiritual meditation.

  4. Ultimate Journey by Richard Bernstein

    Ultimate Journey Retracing the Path of an Ancient Buddhist Monk Who Crossed Asia in Search of Enlightenment. ... its lack of excitement," writes 50-year-old Richard Bernstein, a book critic for The New York Times who had served as a foreign correspondent in Asia and Europe for both Time magazine and The New York Times. Searching for "a getaway ...

  5. Ultimate Journey

    In 1998, Richard Bernstein, venerated journalist and Time magazine's first Beijing bureau chief, retraced the steps of Hsuan Tsang's long and sinuous route, comparing present and past. Aided by modern technology but hampered by language barriers, harried border crossings, hostile Islamic regimes, and the accidental U.S. bombing of the ...

  6. Ultimate Journey

    Richard Bernstein's story of his long journey through Asia is at once a memoir of adventurous travel and a record of cultural discovery and spiritual quest. In the year 629, a greatly revered Chinese Buddhist monk, Hsuan Tsang, set out across Asia in search of the Buddhist Truth, to settle what he called the "perplexities of my mind." Nearly a millennium and a half later, Richard Bernstein ...

  7. Ultimate Journey by Richard Bernstein

    RICHARD BERNSTEIN has been a reporter, culture critic, and commentator for more than thirty years. He was a foreign correspondent in Asia and Europe for Time and The New York Times, and was the first bureau chief in China for Time.He is the author of several books, among them China 1945; A Girl Named Faithful Plum; Ultimate Journey, a New York Times Best Book of the Year; and Out of the Blue ...

  8. Ultimate Journey: Retracing the Path of an Ancient Buddhist Monk Who

    Buy Ultimate Journey: Retracing the Path of an Ancient Buddhist Monk Who Crossed Asia in Search of Enlightenment (Vintage Departures) Illustrated by Bernstein, Richard (ISBN: 9780679781578) from Amazon's Book Store. Everyday low prices and free delivery on eligible orders.

  9. Ultimate Journey by Richard Bernstein

    Ultimate Journey. Retracing the Path of an Ancient Buddhist Monk Who Crossed Asia in Search of Enlightenment. ... In 1998, Richard Bernstein, venerated journalist and Time magazine's first Beijing bureau chief, retraced the steps of Hsuan Tsang's long and sinuous route, comparing present and past. Aided by modern technology but hampered by ...

  10. ULTIMATE JOURNEY: Retracing the Path of an Ancient Buddhist Monk Who

    Richard Bernstein, ULTIMATE JOURNEY: Retracing the Path of an Ancient Buddhist. , $26 (368pp) ISBN 978--375-40009-4. Bernstein, a New York Times book critic and former Time magazine Beijing ...

  11. Ultimate journey : retracing the path of an ancient Buddhist monk who

    "Richard Bernstein's story of his long journey through Asia is at once a memoir of adventurous travel and a record of cultural discovery and spiritual quest." "In the year 629, a greatly revered Chinese Buddhist monk, Hsuan Tsang, set out across Asia in search of the Buddhist Truth, to settle what he called the "perplexities of my mind."

  12. Ultimate journey : Bernstein, Richard : Free Download, Borrow, and

    Ultimate journey Bookreader Item Preview ... Ultimate journey by Bernstein, Richard. Publication date 2001 Topics Xuanzang, ca. 596-664, Priests, Buddhist -- China -- Biography, Silk Road -- Description and travel Publisher A.A. Knopf Collection internetarchivebooks; printdisabled; inlibrary

  13. Ultimate Journey: Retracing the Path of an Ancient Buddhist Monk Who

    Ultimate Journey: Retracing the Path of an Ancient Buddhist Monk Who Crossed Asia in Search of Enlightenment: Bernstein, Richard: 9780375400094: Books - Amazon.ca

  14. Ultimate Journey: Retracing the Path of... book by Richard Bernstein

    Buy a cheap copy of Ultimate Journey: Retracing the Path of... book by Richard Bernstein. In 629, the revered Buddhist monk Hsuan Tsang set out across Asia in search of the Ultimate Truth, and to settle what he called the perplexities of my mind. From... Free Shipping on all orders over $15.

  15. Ultimate Journey: Retracing the Path of an Ancient Buddhist Monk Who

    Buy Ultimate Journey: Retracing the Path of an Ancient Buddhist Monk Who Crossed Asia in Search of Enlightenment First Edition by Bernstein, Richard (ISBN: 9780375400094) from Amazon's Book Store. Everyday low prices and free delivery on eligible orders.

  16. Ultimate Journey: Retracing the Path of an Ancient Buddhist ...

    Richard Bernstein's story of his long journey through Asia is at once a memoir of adventurous travel and a record of cultural discovery and spiritual quest. In the year 629, a greatly revered Chinese Buddhist monk, Hsuan Tsang, set out across Asia in search of the Buddhist Truth, to settle what he called the "perplexities of my mind."

  17. Ultimate journey by Bernstein, Richard

    Ultimate journey by Bernstein, Richard, 2001, A.A. Knopf edition, in English - 1st ed. ... "Richard Bernstein's story of his long journey through Asia is at once a memoir of adventurous travel and a record of cultural discovery and spiritual quest.". "In the year 629, a greatly revered Chinese Buddhist monk, Hsuan Tsang, set out across Asia in ...

  18. Ultimate Journey: Retracing the Path of an Ancient Buddhist ...

    Richard Bernstein, a former New York Times correspondent in China (and now a book critic for that newspaper), follows Hsuan's trail in this outstanding narrative of his overland journey into the heart of Central Asia, a journey that takes him and the fortunate reader into places that few travelers are privileged to see--places, such as Kashgar ...

  19. Ultimate Journey : Retracing the Path of an Ancient Buddhist Monk Who

    Richard Bernstein. Richard Bernstein, a book critic for the "New York Times" & formerly a national cultural correspondent, was a foreign correspondent for both the "Times" & "Time" magazine. He was also "Time" magazine's Beijing bureau chief. "Ultimate Journey" is his fifth book & his third on Asia. He lives in New York City.

  20. Ultimate Journey

    Ultimate Journey. INTRODUCTION. Ultimate Journey. Retracing the Path of an Ancient Buddhist Monk Who Crossed Asia in Search of Enlightenment. By RICHARD BERNSTEIN. Knopf. Read the Review. My doctrine is to think the thought that is unthinkable, to practice the deed that is not performable, to speak the speech that is inexpressible, and to be ...

  21. Ultimate Journey: The Path of an Ancient Buddhist Monk

    Richard Bernstein discussed his book [Ultimate Journey: Retracing the Path of an Ancient Buddhist Monk Who Crossed Asia in Search of Enlightenment], published by Knopf. In the book, Mr. Bernstein ...

  22. Ultimate Journey: Retracing the Path of an Ancient Buddhist ...

    Ultimate Journey: Retracing the Path of an Ancient Buddhist Monk Who Crossed Asia in Search of Enlightenment by Bernstein, Richard - ISBN 10: 0679781579 - ISBN 13: 9780679781578 - Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group - 2002 - Softcover