"What a wonderful book! If you want to know something about Zen, this book is for you. direct and deep, real and rich. Even if you are not interested in Zen, this book is full of down-to-earth wisdom. Do not miss out. Enjoy reading about something that could change your life." -- Roshi Joan Halifax , Abbot, Upaya Zen Center "Les Kaye is unfailingly modest, flexible in his point of view, always practical, and in his understated way, very wise. He is generous and unflappable. This doesn''t sound much like the enigmatic Zen Master of popular imagination.
Les is perhaps the opposite: straightforwardly who he is, with no interest in being otherwise. Over many years of faithful, trusting practice, Les has become that good teacher. In this book Les is talking about how he feels about Zen practice, what it means to him, and how he views it. Maybe you can''t explain Zen practice, but you can, if you have the knack, compare it to things readers already know, to give them a powerful image of what the practice is like. Zen practice, Les says, is like the ocean. If you want to know what it really is, there''s no other way than to plunge in." -- From the Foreword by Norman Fischer "In this lovely plainspoken book, Les offers the spirit of Suzuki Roshi Zen. Sometimes enigmatic, sometimes sweet, sometimes with stories of the past, sometimes timeless wisdom.
all passed on to you with a kind heart." -- Jack Kornfield , author of A Path with Heart "I really enjoyed reading I Had a Good Teacher , a marvelous collection of Les Kaye''s talks and writings. I can feel Les''s authenticity and deep understanding throughout the book. Les is a perfect example of Suzuki''s ideal of neither priest nor lay. Those who study with him--in person or in this book--indeed have a good teacher." -- David Chadwick , author of Crooked Cucumber and Tassajara Stories: A Sort of Memoir/Oral History of the First Zen Buddhist Monastery in the West--The First Year, 1967 "When a good teacher has a good student, and that good student has more good students, to become a student of those students gives you the benefit of three generations of teachers. That''s how I felt as I read Giuseppe Gyokudo Prisco''s book of teachings of his teacher, Les Kaye, a student of Zen Master Shunryu Suzuki. If you''re a seasoned student of Zen, your heart will be warmed as you gaze through this simple window into wisdom that has already shaped you.
And if you''re completely new to the Zen path, I can''t think of a better introduction. Each short, accessible chapter will help you experience, through words, a way of seeing and being that can''t be reduced to words. Highly recommended." -- Brian D. McLaren , author of Life After Doom and The Last Voyage "Les Kaye is a pioneer in living a full Zen life in an ordinary life of work, family, and community. In I Had a Good Teacher , he brings alive the simplicity, ordinariness, and profundity of Zen practice. With fresh, engaging teaching, the book gives us a glimpse into Les''s mature spirituality as a ''good student'' of his teacher." -- Gil Fronsdal , founding teacher, Insight Meditation Center, Redwood City, California, and author of Everything Is Practice: A Guide for Insight Meditation Retreats Praise for Les Kaye''s previous books: "Kaye''s experiences are encouraging and thought-provoking.
He describes a hopeful and authentic path." -- Tricycle: The Buddhist Review "Veteran IBM executive and Zen monk Kaye shows how spirituality and work can comingle, even merge with ease and effectiveness." -- ALA Booklist "[Kaye''s] thoughtful, understandable, and insightful presentation offers real examples of the practical application of spiritual wisdom." -- Library Journal "[Les] Kaye worked at IBM for 30 years as a design engineer. He studied Zen, became a Zen master and, upon his retirement [from IBM], became the Abbot of Kannon Do, a Zen Meditation Center in Mountain View, California. Kaye . came to find that his workplace could become the site of his religious practice. He learned that he could shift his interest to the dynamic process of work, to the best ways of approaching tasks and relationships so that the work environment could express a spiritual, communal feeling.
The being-in-the-world emphasized in Zen, Kaye found, was no different from the character traits of integrity, morality, self-discipline, willingness to learn, responsibility and perseverance which IBM encouraged in its employees. Kaye is an extraordinary witness to the way Zen practice can mesh with corporate culture [and] demonstrates elegantly how Zen thinking can transform an individual''s experience of the workplace." -- Publishers Weekly.