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> How much does he know about Zen already? > > When I was 15, the book I kept going back to again and again was > "The Zen Experience" by Thomas Hoover. It's more a history book -- > charting Zen from its beginnings with the original sutras, > Kumarijiva's concept of Void, and Bodhidharma's journey out of India > to China. It explains the philosophical theories while describing > the lives and beliefs of each of Zen's Patriarchs as the religion > morphed from Indian Mahayana Buddhism, into the North and South > schools of Chinese Ch'an, and finally the Rinzai and Soto Zen sects > of Japan. > If it's history your friend is interested in, you're going to want to buy something much more recent than Hoover, for one thing. More importantly, you'll want to buy a book with some scholarly merit. Look at books by John McRae ("Seeing Through Zen") or Bernard Faure, for instance--both Chan/Zen scholars at the top of their field. My .02 Jeff