The Open Road (36 page)

Read The Open Road Online

Authors: Pico Iyer

 

 

It was my late father, as described in these pages, who handed down to me his acquaintance with the Fourteenth Dalai Lama and, in fact, brought Tibetan monks and symbols into our living room when I was a very small boy; as the years have passed, I have come to see that this was one of his most precious bequests. My mother, to my delight and gratitude, shares her graces and gifts with me daily. In California, my friends at the New Camaldoli Benedictine hermitage have been teaching me for seventeen years why monks do what they do, and what the fruits of their stillness, devotion, and compassion really mean; and in Japan the indomitable and cheerful members of the Shikanodai Ping-Pong Club have offered something of the same in a less formal context.

When I began writing on Tibet, half a lifetime ago, it was very much a solo endeavor; I can still remember explaining a bit about the country and its traditions to my sweet and shining companion, Hiroko Takeuchi, when we met in 1987. Since then, Hiroko has taken Tibet to her great heart, become the uncrowned princess of her second home, Dharamsala, and has tried hard to implement what she has learned from the Tibetans, often breaking the ice in conversations with the Dalai Lama while I was dancing over the surface. When he heard I was working on this book, the Dalai Lama told her to “check on him and make sure he’s not going wrong,” a useful reminder to us both about how universal responsibility begins at home.

Finally, as one living in a small apartment in suburban Japan, I am always much influenced and colored by such works as visit me from afar. In this case, I feel a great debt to some of the material that really moved me and gave me food for thought while I was working on this book: Julie Taymor’s film
Titus,
Isabel Coixet’s
My Life Without Me,
the writings of Philip Roth, Tracy Kidder’s
Mountains Beyond Mountains,
the art of Bill Viola, and, as mentioned, the rigorous and self-mocking global optimism of U2, whose work for liberation and conscience soaringly chimes with much that this book is about. Insofar as this work, like all my books, is about how to find clarity and peace—a larger meaning—in the midst of our accelerating, jam-packed, exhilarating new global order, U2 clearly offer an example of how to laugh at one’s own claims to goodness while still working overtime to do some good for others. I appreciate the attempt of such individuals to take on the world, with open eyes and ferocious determination, without ever giving up on a devotion to what is not so often visible in the world.

 

 

A NOTE ABOUT THE AUTHOR

 

Pico Iyer has published five books on modern globalism, novels on Revolutionary Cuba and Islam, and a set of literary essays. A writer for
Time
since 1982, he has covered Tibet also for the
New Yorker,
the
New York Review of Books,
the
New York Times
Op-Ed page, the
Los Angeles Times,
the
Financial Times,
and many other magazines on both sides of the Atlantic and Pacific. He has been traveling in and around Tibetan communities and the Himalayas for more than thirty years.

 

 

ALSO BY PICO IYER

 

Sun After Dark

 

Abandon

 

The Global Soul

 

Tropical Classical

 

Cuba and the Night

 

Falling Off the Map

 

The Lady and the Monk

 

Video Night in Kathmandu

 

 

This Is a Borzoi Book Published by Alfred A. Knopf, Inc.

 

Copyright © 2008 by Pico Iyer

 

All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Alfred A. Knopf, a division of Random House, Inc., New York, and in Canada by Random House of Canada Limited, Toronto..

 

www.aaknopf.com

 

Knopf, Borzoi Books, and the colophon are registered trademarks of Random House, Inc.

 

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data TK

 

The author would like to thank the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation for its very generous and gracious support in making the research and writing of this book possible.

 

eISBN: 978-0-307-26865-5

 

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