Siddhartha

Siddhartha

Hermann Hesse

4.08
881,459 valutazioni·34,612 recensioni

Il romanzo classico di Hermann Hesse ha affascinato, ispirato e influenzato generazioni di lettori, scrittori e pensatori. In questa storia di un ricco bramino indiano che abbandona una vita di privilegi per cercare la realizzazione spirituale, Hesse sintetizza filosofie disparate – religioni orient...

pagine
152
Format
Mass Market Paperback
Pubblicato
1981-12-01
Editore
Bantam Books

Sull'autore

Hermann Hesse
Hermann Hesse

100 libri · 0 follower

Many works, includingSiddhartha(1922) andSteppenwolf(1927), of German-born Swiss writerHermann Hesseconcern the struggle of the individual to find wholeness and meaning in life; he won the Nobel Prize for literature in 1946.Other best-known works of this poet, novelist, and painter includeThe Glass Bead Game, which, al...

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Recensioni della comunità

34,612 recensioni
4.1
881,459 valutazioni
5
45%
4
30%
3
15%
2
7%
1
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Vit Babenco
Vit Babenco·10 months ago
Siddhartha was growing up surrounded with love… But his mutinous mind didn’t let him be at rest… It made him seek… What is verity? Where it can be found?Did not the ancient source of all springs flow within his own heart? This was what must be found, the fountainhead within one’s own being; you had to make it your own! All else was searching, detour, confusion.He decides to choose a way of asceticism… There he finds no final wisdom… He visits Gautama… No final wisdom… And now his inner self awak...
Fergus, Weaver of Autistic Webs
Fergus, Weaver of Autistic Webs·5 years ago
Hesse never really made the grade with this one in my young mind. I read it in 1973, and found it compounded my youthful confusion. Simply put, it conflicted jarringly with an insight I had been blessed - or cursed - with three years earlier.That insight was that the purity of Being is insulted by our widespread profligacy. Call it ontological if you prefer, but following Heidegger I saw the Crown of Being as the very germ and goal of a spiritual quest.Stephane Mallarme spins an imaginative simi...
Dr. Appu Sasidharan (Dasfill)
Dr. Appu Sasidharan (Dasfill)·6 years ago

Siddhartha is a German novel by Hermann Hesse. This book tells us the story of Siddhartha’s quest for spiritual illumination. This book will spiritually enlighten you and teach you to identify love and love the world with certitude.
“Gentleness is stronger than severity, water is stronger than rock, love is stronger than force.”
Sean Barrs
Sean Barrs ·9 years ago
In life we all look for meaning, we all look for something to give us a purpose and, in essence, a reason to actually be alive. Nobody wants to get to the end of their journey and realise it was all for nothing, and that their days were utterly wasted. So how do we find this meaning? “One must find the source within one's own Self, one must possess it. Everything else was seeking -- a detour, an error.” We must find our own peace. Siddhartha followed the teachings of others and it granted him...
Sanjay
Sanjay·13 years ago
It was the book I read it four years back. And to tell the truth, I did not like it much at the time. I thought this guy had written a book for Western audiences who are not familiar with the 'philosophy of karma and dharma', or rather, in general, the basic philosophy of India, who after reading it will realize something esoteric. And so it seemed to me a book containing wisdom that didn't touch me. And I finished it with the verdict: contains wisdom, but lacks depth, is boring at times, and do...
Stephen
Stephen·15 years ago
My apologies if this review reeks of "GUSHness." However, it gave me that ONE-OF-A-KIND reading experience that doesn't come along often and so I think it is certainly worthy of the praise I shall heep upon it. Beautifully written and a deeply personal story, Hesse has created the ultimate expression of the journey of self-discovery. The book details the story of Siddhartha, the young and brilliant son of a Brahmin in ancient India. The Brahmin are the uber revered caste comprised of poets, ...
Kemper
Kemper·15 years ago
So there’s a damn dirty hippie in India named Siddhartha who is supposed to be seeking spiritual enlightenment, but instead of going to a good Christian church like a normal person, he wanders around the woods for a while with some other damn dirty hippies. After he meets Buddha, he finally gets tired of being broke-ass and homeless, and he goes into town where he makes a pile of money. This is good because everyone knows that engaging in capitalism is the only proper way to go through life. As ...
J.G. Keely
J.G. Keely·18 years ago
By the latter part of the 19th Century, the colonial spread of European powers across the world was in full swing. The British ruled India and Australia and had gone to war with China to force opium on the population. Africa, South America, and the Philippines had been portioned out for Western rule and control of resources.But tyranny does not travel only in one direction, from conqueror to subject. When Medieval European knights returned from the crusades, they brought with them mathematical p...
Himanshu
Himanshu·11 years ago
Has it ever happened to you that you are standing, facing a magnificent, breathtaking view, in solitude, and a strong wind hits you in the face? You try to stay still, with eyes closed and then an involuntary smile comes across your face? This book was like that.
Michelle
Michelle·17 years ago
Whatever. Blah blah blah Samana. Blah blah blah Kamala. Blah blah blah Samsara. Blah blah blah River. Blah blah blah Om.