I too was fortunate to receive an advance copy of ‘Finding the Way’. It is rare that I give a 5-rating to a book but it is rarer that I have encountered the sense of enchantment and connectedness this novel raised in me.
From beginning to end Finding the Way exhibited the freshness and soulfulness of a first novel but the wisdom of an experienced writer. The novel is extremely well researched and the authenticity never waivers.
The novel is philosophically and spiritually challenging and leads one to a new understanding of Taoism. Much like gaining a deeper understanding of the Four Noble truths of Buddhism by reading about Siddhartha’s exposure to poverty and his realization of suffering, learning of Lao Tzu’s life and journey, however fictionalized the account may be, really helps to understand The Way, or Taoism. Little is known about Lao Tzu but Ng uses historical facts, accounts of wars and court life, geographical and agricultural descriptions of the period when he lived to extrapolate Lao Tzu’s life. Nothing rings false in this novel!
I loved the playfulness and adventure of the novel and how it was interspersed with spiritual depth. One is reminded of Grasshopper questioning his master in Kung Fu episodes.
I did a lot of highlighting on the ebook version I read and share with you below some of my favorite passages which are poetic and philosophical at the same time.
However, first I would like to thank and
congratulate the author, Wayne Ng for his innovative new novel.
Favorite passages (all direct quotes):
At school he had excelled in music, mathematics, rituals and writing, cultivating his mind as finely as wind sculpts pebbles smooth and round.
P.11
Captain, be content with what you have and who you are, and no one can despoil you. Then you shall forever be safe and secure. p. 13
With those words it was as though my world had suddenly found symmetry where nothing previously had seemed to fit together. p. 17
“It was easy,” he shrugged. “Why would I battle the impossible? No man is stronger than that river.”
I was an imbecile. He had of course known enough to have the river do his bidding. Instead of trying to conquer the river, he had followed its path. P. 26
I did not know my father for very long. But I know he did not aspire to greatness. He wished to merely live his life simply. That he was a great man mattered little to him, thus I saw him so all the more.” p.34
It discouraged me that others were drawn into complications when simplicity was all that was required. p.43
I am never alone, and neither are you.”
... wherever I walked, I had all that Nature had created around me. p.55
Those that grab at something, lose it. p.66
Your Highness, were I to desire to change the world, I could not succeed. The world is shaped by the Way; the self cannot shape it. Trying to change it, you damage it; trying to possess it, you lose it. p. 120
And one’s mind is the world’s mind. p. 153
We roamed among people blinded by too much color, deafened by too much music, whose palates were dulled by too many tastes, and whose hearts were torn asunder by too much desire. p. 256
“Sir, leadership is not the exertion of power and control alone. Rather it is the strategic use of enlightened thought and well- intentioned actions.” p. 265