New Releases by Lin Yutang

Lin Yutang is the author of The Importance of Living: "Chinese Lifestyle" (2025), My Country and My People (2021), The Vigil of a Nation (2018), The Wisdom of Confucius (2009), Lin Yutang - The Importance of Living (2008).

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The Importance of Living: "Chinese Lifestyle"

release date: Jan 05, 2025
The Importance of Living: "Chinese Lifestyle"
The Importance of Living by Lin Yutang is a philosophical book that offers a unique perspective on daily life and traditional Chinese thought. The book explores various aspects of living a happy and balanced life, with a focus on the importance of mental peace and accepting the complexities of life. In the book, Lin Yutang delves into the concept of living simply and without complications. He examines traditional Chinese culture, ideas of comfort, and moderation, emphasizing how people often search for happiness in external sources, while the true secret lies in inner contentment. The book is essentially a call for relaxation and peace with oneself and the surrounding world, away from the noise of modern life and excessive pressures. Lin Yutang ties this to traditional concepts like *Tao* and *life balance*, suggesting that people could be happier if they were more mindful in appreciating the everyday moments and seeking meaning in simplicity. Overall, *The Importance of Living* serves as a guide for those seeking a more comfortable and fulfilling life, free from materialism and constant worry.

My Country and My People

release date: Feb 05, 2021
My Country and My People
In this classic book, Yutang Lin does a fantastic job of describing Chinese people, customs and culture in an understandable way for the Western reader. This book was the first of it''s kind, Lin being a rarity as he was fluent in both English and Chinese, having been born in China but growing up in America. This extremely popular book will prove to be a fascinating read, and is highly recommended on the bookshelf of anyone with an interest in different non-Western cultures and societies.

The Vigil of a Nation

release date: Sep 03, 2018
The Vigil of a Nation
For the second time Lin Yutang has gone deep into wartime China and has come out with much to tell. No foreign writer, and few Chinese, could have had such a chance to see past the smoke of war, through the clouds of gossip, and beneath the heaving surface of economic and political change. And Lin Yutang, as always, is unafraid of the truth. His sense of history, joined with his spirit of eager inquiry, led him to watch for the old China along with the new. Only China presents such a study in contrasts, rich alike with romance and with hope for the future. Sitting on the ruins of a Tang palace and telling us tales of ancient times, Lin Yutang looks down at an Industrial Co-operative group working in the gully below and dreams of the China that is to be. He describes a cotton mill, all underground, three miles of whirring machines in tunnels bored beneath the protecting hills; and further west, a vast irrigation system built two thousand years ago and still working perfectly.

The Wisdom of Confucius

release date: Jan 01, 2009

Lin Yutang - The Importance of Living

release date: Nov 01, 2008
Lin Yutang - The Importance of Living
T JOHN DAY book REYNAL HITCHCOCK NEW YORK is not truth that makes man great, but man that makes truth great. CONFUCIUS Only those who take leisurely what the people of the world are busy about can be busy about what the people of the world take leisurely. CHANG CHAO. PREFACE: THIS is a personal testimony, a testimony of my own experience o thought and life. It is not intended to be objective and makes no claim to establish eternal truths. In fact I rather despise claims to objectivity in philosophy the point of view is the thing. I should have liked to call it A Lyrical Philosophy, using the word lyri cal in the sense of being a highly personal and individual oudook. But that would be too beautiful a name and I must forego it, for fear of aiming too high and leading the reader to expect too much, and because the main ingredient of my thought is matter-of-fact prose, a level easier to maintain because more natural. Very much con tented am I to lie low, to cling to the soil, to be of kin to the sod. My soul squirms comfortably in the soil and sand and is happy. Sometimes when one is drunk with this earth, ones spirit seems so light that he thinks he is in heaven. But actually he seldom rises six feet above the ground. I should have liked also to write the entire book in the form of a dialogue like Platos. It is such a convenient form for personal, inadvertent disclosures, for bringing in the significant trivialities of our daily life, above all for idle rambling about the pastures of sweet, silent thought. But somehow I have not done so. I do not know why. A fear, perhaps, that this form of literature being so little in vogue today, no one probably would read it, and a writer after all wants to be read And when I say dialogue, I do not mean answers and questions like newspaper interviews, or those leaders chopped up into short paragraphs I mean really good, long, leisurely dis courses extending several pages at a stretch, with many detours, and coming back to the original point of discussion by a short cut at the most unexpected spot, like a man returning home by climbing over hedge, to the surprise of his walking companion. Oh, how I love to reach home by climbing over the back fence, and to travel on bypaths At least my companion will grant that I am familiar with the way home and with the surrounding countryside ., . But I dare not. I am not original. The ideas expressed here have been thought and expressed by many thinkers of the East and West over and over again those I borrow from the East are hackneyed truths there They are, nevertheless, my ideas they have become a part of my being. If they have taken root in my being, it is because they express something original in me, and when I first encountered them, my heart gave an instinctive assent. I like them as ideas and not because the person who expressed them is of any account. In fact, I have traveled the bypaths in my reading as well as in my writing. Many of the authors quoted are names obscure and may baffle a Chinese professor of literature. If some happen to be well known, I accept their ideas only as they compel my intuitive ap proval and not because the authors are well-known. It is my habit to buy cheap editions of old, obscure books and see what I can dis cover there. If the professors of literature knew the sources of my ideas, they would be astounded at the Philistine. But there is a greater pleasure in picking up a small pearl in an ash-can than in looking at a large one in a jewelers window, I am not deep and not well-read. If one is too well-read, then one does not know right is right and wrong is wrong. I have not read Locke or Hume or Berkeley, and have not taken a college course in philosophy. Technically speaking, my method and my training are all wrong, because I do not read philosophy, but only read life at first hand. That is an unconventional way of studying philosophy the incorrect way...

The Wisdom of India

release date: Oct 15, 2008
The Wisdom of India
The Indian sub continent has been one of the world''s greatest fonts of knowledge and religious concepts. The Rig Veda, Upanishads, Bhagavad Gita, Ramayana, Patanjali Yoga texts, parables of Buddha all are to be found collated within this one book. This is a particularly valuable contribution to the story of human development. Being under one umbrella, these texts can easily be studied and compared for the themes that are common and those that are not.

Lin Yutang on the Wisdom of America

release date: Mar 01, 2007
Lin Yutang on the Wisdom of America
Many of the earliest books, particularly those dating back to the 1900s and before, are now extremely scarce and increasingly expensive. We are republishing these classic works in affordable, high quality, modern editions, using the original text and artwork.

Chinatown Family

release date: Jan 01, 2007
Chinatown Family
Lin Yutang (1895-1976), author of more than thirty-five books, was arguably the most distinguished Chinese American writer of the twentieth century. In Chinatown Family, he brings humor and wisdom to issues of culture, race, and religion as he tells the engrossing and heart-warming story of an immigrant, working-class Chinese American family that settled in New York City during the 1930s and 1940s. Tracing their sometimes troubled and sometimes rewarding journey, Lin paints a vivid portrait of the wonder and the woe of settling into a new land. In an era when interracial marriages were frowned upon and it was forbidden for working-class Chinese men to bring their families to America, this story shows how one family struggled to become new Americans by applying their Taoist philosophy to resist peacefully the discriminatory laws and racism they encountered. Beyond the quest for acceptance and economic success, Chinatown Family also probes deep into the heart of the immigration experience by presenting the perils of assimilation. The burgeoning tensionbetween the desire for material wealth and the traditional Chinese belief in the primary importance of family poses the question: Is it possible to attain the American dream without damaging these primary ties? For each family member, the answer to this question turns out to be different. Through the varied paths that each character takes, the novel dramatizes the ways that Chinese immigrants have negotiated between the competing interests of economic opportunity and traditional values.

L'importance de vivre

release date: Jan 01, 2004
L'importance de vivre
Nul autre que Lin Yutang, lettré chinois pétri de culture occidentale - qui disait " penser en chinois avec un pinceau et en anglais avec une machine à écrire " - pouvait réussir à nous éclairer sur le sens que nous donnons au mot " bonheur " en Occident et en Chine. " Quel peut être le but de la vie, si ce n''en est la jouissance ? " Avec cette formule pour postulat, Lin Yutang ne se soucie pas de philosophie, mais de " la vie toute chaude ". Et cette vie qui est la nôtre, déjà en 1938, date où il écrit ce livre, il déplore qu''elle soit " trop compliquée, notre science trop sérieuse, notre philosophie trop sombre et nos pensées trop embrouillées ". Aux petits soldats obéissants que nous sommes, l''antique sagesse chinoise oppose la figure du " vagabond " : recherchant l''oisiveté, cultivant un esprit libre, dont l''aspiration à l''idéal se tempère d''un désenchantement rieur. Convoquant ses " compagnons spirituels ", poètes et philosophes chinois, mais aussi Thoreau ou Nietzsche, il fait l''éloge d''un homme pleinement homme, capable de goûter à toutes les saveurs de l''existence. Car le banquet de la vie est devant nous et la seule question qui se pose est celle de notre appétit.

With Love & Irony

release date: Jan 01, 2001

La Chine et les Chinois

release date: Jan 01, 1997
La Chine et les Chinois
Interprétation personnelle de toute une culture, vaste fresque de toute une civilisation, cet essai demeure un livre clé sur l''individu et la société en Chine, tant Lin Yutang (1895-1976) a su puiser aux racines culturelles de la civilisation chinoise.

La importancia de comprender

release date: Jan 01, 1994

Weisheit des lächelnden Lebens

release date: Jan 01, 1992

Harvest Moon On West Lake

release date: Jan 26, 1990
Harvest Moon On West Lake
A selection of classical stories, poems, and epigraphs from the wealth of China literary tradition. Included are translations of he Seasons,he Home and Daily Living,and fter Tea and Wineby Chuangtse, Li Mi-an, Motse and others. These literary translations are from Lin Yutang, one of China most famous translators and scholars. Stories, poems, and other translations have been culled from Lin illustrious career as a translator. Lin intent in translating Chinese works into English was to help Chinese students of the English language, but readers of all backgrounds and languages will enjoy these selections. This book features traditional Chinese characters on the left-hand page and English translation on the right. Black and white illustrations and photos throughout.

Lin Yutang's Chinese-english Dictionary of Modern Usage

release date: Jan 01, 1990

The Importance of Living

The Importance of Living
The Importance of Living is a wry, witty antidote to the dizzying pace of the modern world. Lin Yutang''s prescription is the classic Chinese philosophy of life: Revere inaction as much as action, invoke humor to maintain a healthy attitude, and never forget that there will always be plenty of fools around who are willing-indeed, eager-to be busy, to make themselves useful, and to exercise power while you bask in the simple joy of existence.At a time when we''re overwhelmed with wake-up calls, here is a refreshing, playful reminder to savor life''s simple pleasures.

Lin Yutang's chinese-english Dictionnary of modern usage

The Flight of the Innocents

The Flight of the Innocents
Against the background of Red China today, Lin Yutang tells the lush, explosive story of a white man and his beautiful Chinese mistress who, together lead a band of refugees along an incredible escape route to freedom.

The Wisdom of India. Edited by Lin Yutang

The Red Peony

The Red Peony
Romantic story of a rebellious young Chinese widow who, at the turn of the century, refuses to conform to convention in her search for a new life and love.

Mao Tse-Tung and I Were Beggars. With a Forew. by Lin Yutang. Pref. by R.F. Piper. Historical Commentary and Notes by R.C. North. Ill. by the Author. [Transl. by Ph. Siao Ling-Cho].

Wisdom Of India

Wisdom Of India
A Rich And Varied Anthology Of Representative Selections From The Rigveda, The Upanishads, Yoga Aphorisms, Ramayana, Panchatantra, Dhammapada, Sermons, Parables And Legends, Surangama Sutra And Swami Paramananda S Translation Of The Entire Bhagvad Gita. It Is A Wise And Carefully Annotated Distillation Of Indian Mystical And Philosophical Thought, With An Admixture Of Fable And Humour. The Selections Have Been Made Based On Knowledge And Love Of Hindu And Buddhist Writings.

Famous Chinese Short Stories. Retold by Lin Yutang. (2nd Printing.).

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