Siddhartha

by Hermann Hesse
Siddhartha  
published August 1st 2005 by El Paso Norte Press
first published 1922
binding Paperback
isbn 0976072645   (isbn13: 9780976072645)
pages 280
description

Hermann Hesse's Siddhartha is a literary classic. It continues to be the most popular of the many novels by the prolific Nobel Prize laureate. Th...more

date added
12-07-06



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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 15368)



Lauren
01/16/08

Read in January, 2003
Siddhartha’s choices lead him on a journey into the inner psyche. Siddhartha is open to any experiences that will give him added insight into himself. His approach to achieving enlightenment varies from one extreme to another, from total self-deprivation to complete submission of will to carnal desires. While his approach to attaining enlightenment varies throughout the different stages of his life, one thing remains constant: Siddhartha’s determination to attain self-actualization. Sidd...more
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Laura
03/05/08

bookshelves: already-read
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
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John
11/02/07

I taught this book to juniors, and when I did I became frustrated with a student when I introduced it, because he let his classmates know that he'd already read it and it sucked. I'm happy to report, now that we've finished it, that his comments didn't seem to hurt the class's opinion of the book too badly. In fact, that student himself said it was pretty good and that he'd only skimmed it the last time he read it. Lousy kids.... Another student said it was his favorite book that we'd read so fa...more
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Jana
03/11/08

bookshelves: fiction, spirituality
Read in June, 1989
Frank and I were having a conversation the other night in which we were discussing one of our usual topics: religion / spirituality... though I guess the other favorites (art, film, food, books, money woes, professional woes, traffic rants, geography, bad weather, family woes, music, soccer, our friends and our beloved cats) were probably discussed as well... But we were both expressing our mistrust of inexperience, and how we'd never want to take "wisdom" from someone who hadn't live...more
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أروى
Read in January, 2007
قرأتها بالعربية

(سد هارتا)

فتنتني هذه الرواية للكاتب هرمان هسة، كنت قد حصلت عليها من معرض الكتاب، وبقيت تنتظر دورها في الطابور حتى وقعت بين يدي وفتكت بي...


هذه الرواية تترك لك مساحة لتتمدد بأفكارك كما تشتهي، هي تنسكب في داخلك ثم تتشكل بناء على مدى عمقك...وقناعاتك!

تتسرب ...more
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Katarzyna
Read in January, 2003
Those colorful, scented stories, so simple, so obvious- will open your mind and heart.

I read the Polish translation and I often come back to this novel and make new notes.

As there is no longer copy right coverage (my learned firends in intellectual property!) its available online.

[http://www.online-literature.com/hesse/siddhartha/]

Its a very nice website btw.
For book online try Gutenberg Project as well:
www.gutenberg.org/wiki/Main_Pa...

...more
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Mona
07/09/08

bookshelves: literature, philosophy, religion
Read in July, 2008
Set in ancient India, this is the story of a young man who begins his life as the admired and respected son of a Brahmin and ends it as an older, poorer man living contentedly by the river. Siddhartha initially leaves home because he feels restless and discontent with the teachings of his father and the other learned elders. He and his trusted friend Govinda join a group of wandering ascetics, called Samanas, and so his journey begins. Throughout his spiritual travels, Siddhartha meets the Buddh...more
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Mark
03/21/08

Read in March, 2008
The search for truth, salvation and meaning is always a good story to tell. Hesse's novel follows the life and times of "Siddhartha," an ambitious son of a holy man who sets out on his own thirsting for knowledge and truth. So he wonders the forest for a couple of years, meets Buddha -- of all people! -- and decides listening to religous folk isn't his bag. He gives up the knowledge and truth thing, meets up with a moneygrubbing capitalist and prostitute and learns the life of money, v...more
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Laura
07/23/08

Read in July, 2008
The whole time I was reading this, I was trying to imagine how it would have struck me if I was a teenager in high school. Would it have felt like a thunderbolt of lightning? Would it have been completely mind-blowing to me in the way that Rilke's poetry was during the time and the way that it is still is for me today?

Siddhartha was not mind-blowing for me, and in some parts, it felt slow, tedious, and pedantic. In some parts, though, I felt like Hesse captured the non-attachment experie...more
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Sarah
04/04/08

Like many people, I first read Siddhartha in high school as a part of my study of Buddhism and Hinduism. It wasn’t until this second reading that the book made an impression on me. Siddhartha is a young man who spends his life looking for the way to Nirvana. He begins in the forest, living a life of a samana, a wandering ascetic, begging for food and spending his days in meditation. His eventual meeting with the Buddha has an unexpected effect on him: he realizes that teachers cannot really te...more
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Andrew
05/06/07

Read in March, 1996
recommends it for: Spiritual Seekers, Fans of Hard Core Depression
"Siddartha," as I recall it, was a difficult book to get through. In ninth grade, everything is difficult to get through. It's like walking around in a world where the air is made of jello. So much effort, and not enough grapes and peaches and other fruit cocktail misfits floating around to sustain you.

Hesse seeks to convince you that this is essentially the nature of life, and he does it pretty well. The book is fundamentally boring and slow, just like life, and it seems so small...more
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Edstirling
Read in July, 2008
This is an easy read. The narrative lingers and can seem slow at times where it dwells on a scene's mood, but for anyone that knows nothing of buddhism, this is an excellently painless way to dive in.
I picked this book up since I'd been listening to the 1972 album, Close to the Edge, by Yes, which was inspired by this book. It's a spiritual journey very much like Candide. As Candide found peace tending his garden, Siddhartha finds happiness as a ferryman on a river. In this role he learns ...more
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Ian
12/10/07

bookshelves: have-read
Read in January, 2006
recommends it for: Everyone
While this book deals with Philosophy and a soul-searching quest for answers, its really pertinent to everyone, whether they're actively searching in their lives or not.

This book, as evidenced by many other reviews, is complex in its implications, though simple in its telling. Perhaps that is what makes it unique.

Two main themes stick out in my mind from this novel, however. First, is essentially a comparison between one who claims to have found truth by pondering upon it in mediation,...more
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Clare
11/08/07

“Siddhartha listened. He was now all ears, utterly engrossed in listening, utterly empty, utterly absorbing. He felt he had now learned all there was to know about listening. He had often heard all these things, these many voices in the river, but today it all sounded new. He could no longer distinguish the many voices in the river, the cheerful from the weeping, the children’s from the men’s: they all belonged together. The lament of the knower’s yearning and laughing, the screaming of ...more
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Julia
01/29/08

Has a copy to sell/swap — Read in January, 2008
This isn't the best book I've ever come across, but I enjoyed the read. It is a story of finding one's true identity, and had a sense of adventure about it that kept me hooked page after page. It's about a boy in ancient India who comes from a wealthy and distinguished family. However, he is not happy with the life he has. His spiritual elders constantly speak of enlightenment and yet none of them have experienced it. One day, Siddhartha decides he must search for enlightenment someplace el...more
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Holden
07/05/07

bookshelves: fiction
Read in January, 2000
recommends it for: Young people on the path of self-discovery.
This book was one of two gifts (the other, "Old Man and the Sea") given to me at the age of 17. I seem to remember John handing them to me from his car window. I was moving to Florida after being kicked out of my parents' home and John gave the two books to me as a going away present.

I wasn't a reader...I couldn't sit still for it...being out with friends was more important to me at the time. Still, I felt oligated to read them, since they were gifts.

I read "Old Man and...more
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Michael
bookshelves: 60-s-and-70-s-re-reads
Read in January, 1968
I first read this book in the wake of the hippie summer of love. On first reading I went for the Indian background and the generous shovel-loads of oriental "spirituality" that went with it. At the time I was something of a religious fanatic interested in any religion apart from Christianity. Indian Spirituality courtesy of the Beatles and the Maharishi Yogi was the best spirituality around. It was only when I saw Louis Malle's "India" Documentary that I was shocked out of su...more
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Readerbean
bookshelves: bookgroup, classics
Read in December, 2007
I read this book for book group. Prior to reading Siddartha, I had not read any Herman Hesse books so I was intrigued to read it, especially with all the great reviews.

It is a short book - only about 118 pages - one that you want to take your time with if you can.

The book is about Siddartha, as a boy he longs to learn, discover and find "the path of the paths". His philosphy is that he has to learn it on his own, it is not something that can be taught. We watch as Siddartha c...more
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