cover image Graceful Exits: How Great Beings Die: Death Stories of Tibetan, Hindu and Zen Masters

Graceful Exits: How Great Beings Die: Death Stories of Tibetan, Hindu and Zen Masters

. Weatherhill, $12.95 (160pp) ISBN 978-0-8348-0391-6

Often, the stories of great people's deaths focus on the bizarre details. Blackman's book does not focus on such details, but it focuses on death as a great teaching. Death in the Buddhist and Hindu spiritual traditions, according to the author, is not confined to a particular moment but is a process that may take days even after the usual medical indications of death have appeared. The experience of death is part of the discipline that these ""great beings,"" or spiritual teachers, have practiced, and death is an opportunity for the greatest meditation and fulfillment. The 108 stories collected here show that these spiritual teachers did not fear death but rather welcomed it. These masters embrace death not in the sterility of the hospital room but in the company of students and friends, and, thus, death becomes the final lesson that the teachers teach to their students. Written in lucid prose, the book is a training manual for making graceful exits from this life. (May)