My Buddhist Christmas
by Jeremy Phillips
Release Date: 9/8/15
Summary from Goodreads:
It’s not surprising that sixteen year old Chris Jones has no idea where he fits in…
After all, he’s a Buddhist kid in America—during the Christmas season. Add in the fact he plays guitar in a punk rock band called The Dharma Bhumz, and his life is one giant paradox. Caught between the principles of his religion and the influence of his hard-partying bandmates, Chris is in a constant struggle for balance.
An upcoming talent show is his chance to shine—or fail spectacularly…
It’s already hard enough preparing for the show, since his friends are more interested in getting high than practicing. And now Chris has to worry about impressing pretty Mary Simpson.
To make
matters even worse, Mary’s parents are fundamentalist Christians, a few steps
above his family on the social ladder, and they firmly believe Chris isn’t good
enough for their precious daughter.
Conflicted about his friends, lying to his family, and still mourning a devastating loss, Chris wonders if being an American Buddhist guitar wizard wanna-be is worth it.
Or does any of it even matter anymore? .
Conflicted about his friends, lying to his family, and still mourning a devastating loss, Chris wonders if being an American Buddhist guitar wizard wanna-be is worth it.
Or does any of it even matter anymore? .
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My first novel will be available on September 8th, 2015. It's
a Young Adult fiction story called: My Buddhist Christmas.
Author Links:
My
Own Thoughts On My Buddhist Christmas
By
Jeremy Phillips
I have been a student of Eastern philosophy, and
Buddhism in particular, for a long time now.
It has always been fascinating to me.
But years ago, when I first tried to do any reading about it, the very foreign
nature of the philosophy tended to get in the way of actually understanding
what I was reading. No matter what book
I chose to read, no matter what school of Buddhist philosophy I was trying to
understand, it was always the same:
A master teacher of some type, a person very different than myself, would be describing these very old ideas, from his very Eastern mindset. Eventually, I came to feel that what might be helpful for a Western reader would be a book that spoke about this stuff in an entirely different way… When I sat down to write My Buddhist Christmas, I did it with the idea of writing a young adult fiction story, about an American teenager who had been raised up as a Buddhist all of his life. Such a person, unlike myself who approached Buddhist philosophy with the mindset of an adult raised in the USA, would understand Buddhism as a more intimate, more essential part of how he already viewed the world. Such a kid would truly be a Buddhist, while still being very much an American teenager.
When I started taking my own kids to a Shin Buddhist temple in Spokane, Washington, I started to wonder how the conflicts of life might go for these kids, conflicts which can be even more of a challenge during the Christmas season.
But My Buddhist Christmas is more than a just a book
on Buddhist philosophy. It’s also a
“coming of age” story, told from the perspective of a main character who is feeling
some of these conflicts very intensely, while also dealing with a devastating
loss. During the course of the story, my
narrator character can be seen experiencing a lot of the stresses that a
teenager in America will experience.
He experiences
the conflict of becoming infatuated with a pretty girl, and of falling rapidly
(perhaps a little too rapidly) in love for the first time. He experiences the conflict of trying to keep
a group of unreliable teenagers on task, so that they can make their Punk rock garage
band work out for a talent show that he’s involved with. He experiences the difficulty of peer
pressure, in a variety of ways.
As he goes about his life, my narrator also shares
with the reader a variety of Buddhist parables and philosophical observations,
learned from his childhood. The end result
of this, is that as the narrator gets to the end of his story and grows up some
about how he is living, as he more fully understands his own Buddhist
philosophy, the reader, too, will also gather a greater understanding.
Really, I wrote this book for people of all ages. Adults will read it, and perhaps remember how
it was to be a teen, how it was to be growing up and starting to take
responsibility for themselves more. Teens
and pre-teens who read it, will be able to identify with some of the struggles
represented in the story. Ultimately it
is my hope that whoever reads it, will come away with a better understanding of
what Buddhism has to say about life, while enjoying an entertaining story.
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