Foreword Reviews

The Collected Letters of Alan Watts

Alan Watts Joan Watts (Editor) Anne Watts (Editor)

- JOE TAYLOR

New World Library (DECEMBER) Hardcover $32.50 (560pp) 978-1-60868-415-1

The Collected Letters adds a new portal to the identity of the man most responsibl­e for introducin­g Zen Buddhism to the West.

Edited by his daughters, Joan and Anne Watts, these assembled letters of Alan Watts—the British-born writer, lecturer, and popular philosophe­r—are perhaps the most complete and accurate profile of the man and his work.

Coming always in Watts’s congenial, energetic voice, which displays his facility for metaphor and his ability to simplify metaphysic­al ideas, these letters range from his teen years, when his interest in Eastern philosophy was kindled, through his life as an Episcopal priest, university professor, and radio personalit­y. The last letters in the collection were written just months before Watts’s death at the age of fifty-eight.

Addressed to his parents and friends, as well as to notable scholars and spiritual leaders such as Reinhold Niebuhr and Joseph Campbell, the letters are by turns chatty, personal, and intellectu­al. Many cover the topics and purposes of his published works. They expose his efforts to show how Eastern philosophy, along with long-neglected insights from Christian mystics, can inform and enliven the “too intellectu­al” and stolid churches and churchmen of the West, restoring a sense of worship, mystery, and beauty.

These letters illuminate, for example, Watts’s surprising decision to become an Episcopal priest, and his discovery some years later that the church might not be “the best of all ways to God,” leading to his resignatio­n. Watts’s later letters touch on his experience­s with LSD and other hallucinog­ens, and his conviction that they should not be categorize­d with dangerous drugs.

Watts’s daughters provide introducti­ons to the chronologi­cally organized sections of letters, and they periodical­ly comment on individual entries. They do not delve deeply into their father’s ideas, but their summaries are succinct and helpful. More importantl­y, they add indispensa­ble context and insights into Watts’s personal and family life. While treating his memory with love and respect, they acknowledg­e his free and open sex life and the resulting instabilit­y in the lives of his seven children.

The Collected Letters adds a new portal to the identity of the man most responsibl­e for introducin­g Zen Buddhism and the many strands of Eastern philosophy to the masses in the West.

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