• Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer

The Poetry Box

  • About
    • Mission
    • What’s in a Name?
    • Meet the Team
    • Contact
    • Privacy Policy
  • Contests & Awards
    • The Poetry Box Chapbook Prize 2025
    • 2024 Winners
    • 2023 Winners
    • 2022 Winners
    • 2021 Winners
    • 2020 Winners
    • 2019 Winners
    • 2018 Winners
    • Pushcart Nominees
  • Publishing
    • Poetry Books, Chapbooks, & Illustrated Collections
    • Testimonials from Authors
  • The Poeming Pigeon
  • Events
    • The Poetry Box – LIVE
    • Our YouTube Channel
    • All Events / Readings
  • Newsletters
  • Bookstore
    • All Books
    • Overstock Sale
    • Art Prints
  • Cart
The Further Adventures of Zen Patriarch Dōgen

The Further Adventures of Zen Patriarch Dōgen

by James K. Zimmerman

Release: March 8, 2024
Purchase Here
SKU: 978-1-956285-54-3 Categories: Chapbooks, Poetry Collections Tags: bare attention, Chan Buddhism, Dōgen Zenji, full presence, impermanence, James K. Zimmerman, no-self, path to liberation from suffering, poems, poetry, Sōto school of Zen, Zen

Share to Social Media:

  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • More
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr
  • Description
  • Additional information
  • Sample Poem
  • Reviews (0)

Description

The Further Adventures of Zen Patriarch Dōgen

by James K. Zimmerman

Finalist in The Poetry Box Chapbook Prize, 2023

The poems in The Further Adventures of Zen Patriarch Dōgen were inspired by the life and teachings of Dōgen Zenji, a thirteenth-century Japanese monk credited with bringing Chan Buddhism to Japan and founding the Sōto school of Zen. The writing is founded upon the presumed experience and perspective Dōgen would have if he were alive today. Essential Buddhist concepts of bare attention, full presence, impermanence, no-self, and the path to liberation from suffering play out through the “eyes of a river” – in a self-driving car, a dentist’s chair, the water’s edge, the contemplation of circularity. In a world of bare attention and full presence, there are no words; inherent in these poems is the paradox of attempting to express this experience through the medium of language.

Enjoy a Video of James Reading from the Book:

Early Praise for The Further Adventures of Zen Patriarch Dōgen:

While “wanting you to not know/ anyone/ has been/ here/ at all,” James K. Zimmerman, in the persona of Dōgen Zenji, offers the reader a glimpse of enlightenment as embodied presence in situations taken, sometimes humorously, from our contemporary world. The Further Adventures of Zen Patriarch Dōgen elucidates the intricacies of Zen philosophy in poems spare as “a winterbreath of silence” and lush as “the rhythm/ of hands,/ gullwing,/ flutter/ of beachplum/ blossoms.” Reader, you will find here wisdom, and its sister, compassion.

—Gillian Cummings, author of The Owl Was a Baker’s Daughter

As I sit now in the now with James K. Zimmerman’s book of luminous meditative poems, The Further Adventures of Zen Patriarch Dōgen, I find myself deeply touched by their silence and their music. Each poem embodies Buddhist teachings: bare attention, no-self, impermanence, and so much more. The poet holds moments of life in his open hands, sings them and lifts them beyond words, bringing me to deepest stillness. I treasure this unique book and shall keep it close to my meditation seat and my heart.

—Judith S. Schmidt, Ph.D, author of In the Garden of Love and Loss

In The Further Adventures of Zen Patriarch Dōgen, James K. Zimmerman takes us inside the world of emptiness of Zen practice and reveals that it is teeming with life: frog ponds, katydids, and wrens; crystals of melting ice. Zimmerman’s Dōgen encounters the modern world of the self-driving car and the dentist chair, imagines the process of frying an egg, listens to the aye yamma hew of his monkey mind. Silence harbors birdsong, sirens, sneezes. The practitioner struggles, returns, returns yet again—and is suddenly aware of something indescribable: the sound of waking up. Nouns fall upon us like snowflakes and melt away. A slow and attentive reading of this spare collection offers a taste of the continuity of motion found in stillness—an endless becoming that moves inevitably like “cormorants to chum.”

—Kathryn Weld, author of Afterimage and Waking Light

In poems both playful and profound, James K. Zimmerman interrogates what it means to be a “human doing,” both in body and mind. Literally enacting on the page cycles of thought, cycles of nature, cycles of life and death, Zimmerman taps into the beauty, strangeness, difficulty, and promise of the meditative life. While he deals with the abstractions of self and mind, creation is never far from his view and there are stunning moments of beauty like the “one shooting star across/ the velvet skin of midnight” that bring the fullness of the world to his work. Just as “…a thought sings in (silence),” I thought about these poems long after reading them.

— Lynn Schmeidler, author of History of Gone and Half-Lives

About the Author

photo by Daniel Topete

James K. Zimmerman is an award-winning, neurodivergent writer, frequently a Pushcart Prize nominee. His poetry appears in Atlanta Review, Carolina Quarterly, Chautauqua, december, Folio, Lumina, Nimrod, Pleiades, Rattle, and Salt, among many other publications, and is also featured on websites such as The Poetry Foundation, American Life in Poetry, and Vallum. He is the author of “Little Miracles” (Passager Books) and “Family Cookout” (Comstock Press Books), winner of the Jessie Bryce Niles Prize. He resides at the crepuscular edge between this universe and the one next door, often with one foot in each, and, in his spare time, cultivates roses, orchids, and paradoxical questions.

He can be contacted at https://jameskzimmerman.net

 

Like this:

Like Loading...

Additional information

Weight 5 oz
Dimensions 6 × 9 × .2 in
ISBN

978-1-956285-54-3

pages

approx 48

Wholesale

via INGRAM (after Mar 15, 2024)

Sample Poem

Dōgen Takes a Ride
in a Self-Driving Car

Dōgen asks the salesman:

Where was the self
when the car was a thought?
When the thought was a sketch?
When the sketch was design?

Where was the self
on the assembly line
in Alabama? On a truck
from Mexico? A ship
from China?

Is the self in the carbon
and iron of steel?
In the gleam of chrome?
The slick skin of PVC?

Where is the self in the cowhide
of custom bucket seats?
Where do the seats go
when the car is incinerated?
Is the windshield still sand?
Was the sand always glass?

Where is the self that thinks
it can drive itself? In GPS?
Bluetooth? ABS? Cruise control?

Show me the self before
the doors were installed.
Show me the self after
the car is totaled.
After the crusher comes.

Show me the self after
the parts return to earth and sky.

Like this:

Like Loading...

Reviews

There are no reviews yet.

Be the first to review “The Further Adventures of Zen Patriarch Dōgen” Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related products

  • Sale! Cover-WhatSheWasWearing

    What She Was Wearing

    Rated 4.80 out of 5
    $12.00 Original price was: $12.00.$10.00Current price is: $10.00.
    Add to cart
  • Broadfork Farm

    Broadfork Farm

    Rated 5.00 out of 5
    $12.00
    Add to cart
  • Cover-Front-The Widow at the Piano

    The Widow at the Piano

    Read more
  • Giving Ground

    Giving Ground

    $12.00
    Add to cart

Footer

Gold Logo  

Email:
Shawn@ThePoetryBox.com

Talk/Text:
(530)409-0721

The Poetry Box Newsletter Signup

Calls for Submissions, New Releases, Publishing Opportunities, Readings





CLMP logo
Copyright © 2025 The Poetry Box · Site Designed by Shawn Aveningo Sanders · Powered by Genesis
%d