Poets & Writers

Sounds of Silence

Source: Tassajara Zen Mountain Center

ROBERTA GRANT has written for Rolling Stone, New York magazine, the New York Times Book Review, and other publications. She is currently working on a memoir about her years in France.

FROM the age of nineteen, globe-trotting essayist and novelist Pico Iyer had wanted to visit Tassajara, a Zen meditation retreat nestled in the remote wilderness of northern California’s Los Padres National Forest. Iyer is no Zen Buddhist, has never meditated, and would humbly deny that he has a spiritual life as such. Yet at twenty-nine, he became a devoted practitioner of silence and a connoisseur of spaces devoted to quiet contemplation. When he arrived at Tassajara last summer, however, it was to try something new: lead a writing workshop.

Owned by the San Francisco Zen Center as a training site for its students, the Tassajara Zen Mountain Center opens its doors each summer to spiritual seekers from around the world. Many participate in one of a half dozen three-day workshops that focus on how to apply aspects of Zen to activities such as painting, breadmaking, writing, and practicing law.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Poets & Writers

Poets & Writers2 min read
Submission Calendar
AMERICAN POETRY REVIEW Stanley Kunitz Memorial Prize DIAGRAM/NEW MICHIGAN PRESS Chapbook Contest  LEEWAY FOUNDATION  Transformation Awards LOST HORSE PRESS Idaho Prize for Poetry NATIONAL BOOK FOUNDATION National Book Awards  PITTSBURG STATE UNIVERSI
Poets & Writers3 min read
Reactions
Poets & Writers Magazine welcomes feedback from its readers. Please post a comment on select articles at pw.org, e-mail editor@pw.org, or write to Editor, Poets & Writers Magazine, 90 Broad Street, Suite 2100, New York, NY 10004. Letters accepted for
Poets & Writers2 min read
EDITOR’S Note
WHEN I WAS TEN YEARS OLD I LEARNED A HARD LESSON ABOUT trust—and the value of hard work and the power of humility, but mostly trust—that has endured over the years, solidifying into a kind of fence post in the center of my mind that I’ve held on to d

Related Books & Audiobooks