| The White Lotus | Bodhidharma was the first patriarch of Zen. The notes collected by his disciples contain the essential core of Buddha’s message. |
| | |
| The Wild Geese and the Water | In this volume of questions and answers Osho speaks about the art of meditation, to "be meditative, but be in the world." |
| | |
| The Wisdom of the Sands, Vol. 1 | Osho invites us to explore the world of the Sufis, in which we discover the meaning of trust, the wisdom of the heart, and so much more…. |
| | |
| The Wisdom of the Sands, Vol. 2 | In this collection of talks on Sufi stories, Osho takes us to the very foundation of what it means to be conscious. |
| | |
| YAA-HOO! The Mystic Rose | This series will take you step by step on an enchanting journey of words, silence, laughter, tears and pictures as Osho creates the first of his revolutionary OSHO Meditative Therapies. |
| | |
| Yakusan: Straight to the Point of Enlightenment | A collection of five talks given on stories of the Zen master, Yakusan. Talks not so much "about" Zen, but instead a Zen look at the world around us. |
| | |
| Yoga: A New Direction | Osho presents the eight steps of Yoga: self-restraint, fixed observation, posture, breath regulation, abstraction, concentration, contemplation and trance. |
| | |
| Yoga: The Mystery Beyond Mind | Although Patanjali’s sutras are more than two thousand years old, Osho brings them right up to date in these talks, revealing the innate wisdom they carry for humanity, that reaches beyond time. |
| | |
| Yoga: The Path to Liberation | Osho speaks of Patanjali’s system of preparation for enlightenment as empirical, a tool to work with. |
| | |
| Yoga: The Science of Living | Osho shows how three methods – concentration, uninterrupted flow of consciousness and oneness – bring about an inner balance when subject and object disappear. |
| | |
| Yoga: The Science of the Soul | Osho explains the meanings of some of the most important yoga sutras of Patanjali, an early “scientist of the soul.” |
| | |
| Yoga: The Supreme Science | Speaking on a selection of yoga sutras of Patanjali, Osho reveals the vast and deep insight of this ancient science into man’s inner world. |
| | |
| Zarathustra: A God That Can Dance | In the world’s first line-by-line commentary on Friedrich Nietzsche’s Thus Spake Zarathustra, Osho unravels the mystery of man’s three metamorphoses – from camel to lion to child. |
| | |
| Zarathustra: The Laughing Prophet | Here Osho lifts Nietzsche beyond the blight of history, and restores his innocence, turning his great work into a feast of wisdom that we can all appreciate. |
| | |
| The Zen Manifesto: Freedom from Oneself | Osho makes it clear that the West’s comprehension of Zen is still largely intellectual rather than recognizing the penetrating experiential truth that Zen points to – which extends far, far beyond the mind. |
| | |
| Zen: The Diamond Thunderbolt | To experience the diamond thunderbolt is to be shocked out of one’s spiritual sleep. These talks are a thunderstorm! |
| | |
| Zen: The Mystery and the Poetry of the Beyond | Through enigmatic Zen anecdotes and questions from seekers, Osho exposes the narrow-mindedness of organized religions and sheds light on the ecological and social crises facing us today. |
| | |
| Zen: The Path of Paradox, Vol. 1 | Day and night, summer and winter, life and death…nature itself is a paradox and Zen is simply a mirror reflection of life. |
| | |
| Zen: The Path of Paradox, Vol. 2 | This book is brimming with Zen anecdotes showing life’s paradoxical nature and that if you look around you will find contradiction everywhere. |
| | |
| Zen: The Path of Paradox, Vol. 3 | Life, in every dimension, is paradoxical. So religion has to be paradoxical. |
| | |
| Zen: The Quantum Leap from Mind to No-Mind | “This is what Zen calls a quantum leap: from mind to no-mind, from reason to existence, from thinking to silence.” Osho |
| | |
| Zen: The Solitary Bird | Osho takes us deeply into the mysteries of the inner world and shows us the nature of the mind and its limitations when we are seeking consciousness. |
| | |
| Zen: The Special Transmission | This series of talks provides a wonderful, living introduction to the true phenomenon of Zen. |
| | |
| Zen: Zest Zip Zap and Zing | Osho responds to questions on love, freedom, morality, a woman’s role in society, nostalgia, a child’s right to privacy, the purpose of life, and more. |
| | |