| The Grass Grows By Itself | Osho discusses how Zen came into being and describes the remarkable people who spread it across the Asian continent. |
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| The Great Challenge | This introduction to Osho’s work includes the secret aspects of spiritual traditions as well as talks on death, reincarnation and the scientific foundation of his revolutionary technique, Dynamic Meditation. |
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| The Great Pilgrimage: From Here to Here | In this great book of questions and answers Osho reminds us that there is in reality nowhere to go! |
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| The Great Secret | Osho talks on ten of Kabir’s incomparable songs that revolve around "the beloved" – an expression for the state of enlightenment. |
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| The Great Zen Master Ta Hui | Osho tells of the progression of Ta Hui, a well-known Chinese Zen teacher of the 7th century, from his intellectual understanding of Buddhist scriptures to buddhahood. |
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| The Guest | This series of talks is based on Kabir’s penetrating, beautiful songs. There is only one thing in the world that satisfies, says Kabir, and that is the meeting with your self. |
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| Guida Spirituale | Delightful stories and anecdotes inspired by the Desiderata. |
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| Hammer on the Rock | This is a diary of intimate meetings between people of all ages and from all walks of life with a modern buddha, Osho. The issues: sex, work, relationships, death and meditation. |
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| Hari Om Tat Sat: The Divine Sound – That Is the Truth | Responding to a wide variety of questions, Osho gives straight talk on touchy subjects, including an insightful look at complex global issues. |
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| The Heart Sutra | Osho speaks on awareness and enlightenment, trust and the heart and encourages us all to reclaim the buddha within ourselves. |
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| The Heartbeat of the Absolute | Sutras from the ancient Sanskrit scriptures – the Ishavasya Upanishad – are transmuted into stunning insights that can open the reader’s eyes to his own inner reality. |
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| The Hidden Harmony | If Heraclitus had been born in India rather than Greece, says Osho, he would have been recognized not simply as a philosopher but as a buddha, a mystic. |
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| Hidden Mysteries | Osho explains how the significance of temples, statues, places of pilgrimage, incense, mantras and astrology, have all been debased or lost over thousands of years. |
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| The Hidden Splendor | Osho unfolds the basic search for childlike innocence in all its joy, playfulness, and fearlessness…a state of being which Osho describes as our "hidden splendor." |
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| Hyakujo: The Everest of Zen, with Basho's Haikus | Hyakujo made two great contributions to Zen that served as landmarks of change within the Zen tradition: "sudden enlightenment" and Zen monasteries. |
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| I Am That | Talks on the Isa Upanishad. These sutras are amongst the most ancient wisdom available to mankind – transmitted from masters to their disciples twenty-five centuries before Buddha. |
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| I Am the Gate | This is the book where Osho talks about himself – not as a man, not even as a mystic, but as a manifestation of existence itself. |
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| I Celebrate Myself: God Is No Where, Life Is Now Here | In this powerful series of talks, Osho takes on all our assumptions and misconceptions that we live in a divided universe; creator and created, believer and belief, theist and atheist. |
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| I Say Unto You, Vol. 1 | Casting aside age-old preconceptions, Osho reveals the real magic and miracles of Jesus. |
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| I Say Unto You, Vol. 2 | Osho talks on the beauty and wisdom of Jesus’ sayings. |
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| In Search of the Miraculous | This is an unusual and fascinating read for anyone who is interested in the practical application of the esoteric aspects of mysticism, and the science of human energy as it is understood in the East. |
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| The Inner Journey | The Inner Journey is a precise manual for tuning the body, mind, heart and hara to an inner balance and harmony to prepare ourselves for the experience of meditation. |
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| Inner War and Peace | Commenting on the first cantos of the Bhagavad Gita, Osho exposes the roots of our contemporary personal and global problems and proposes his timeless solution. |
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| Interviews from the Silent Period | Various excerpts from Osho’s three-and-a-half-year period of public silence. They include interviews and messages sent via his secretary. |
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| The Invitation | An invitation and introduction to Osho’s vision through his responses to questions. Osho shows how the problems of everyday life can be used as tools for transformation. |
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