Ācariya Mun Bhuridatta Thera
Ajaan Maha Boowa
A biography of Ajahn Mun. He was widely revered during his lifetime for the extraordinary courage and determination he displayed in practicing the ascetic way of life and for his uncompromising strictness in teaching his many disciples.
Venerable Ajaan Khao Anālayo
Ajaan Maha Boowa
A biography of Ajahn Khao Analayo, a senior disciple of Ajahn Mun.
This is the Path
Ajahn Dtun
A collection of talks by Ajahn Dtun, compiled and printed by Wat Buddha Dhamma to commemorate his first visit to their monastery.
On Love
Ajahn Jayasaro
In learning about love, these are the kinds of questions we can ask ourselves: What is love? What are the advantages and drawbacks of love? How does love arise? How is love sustained? How does love decay and end? What are the impurities of love? What preserves and purifies love? How should we behave with respect to love so as to maximize happiness and minimize pain?
A Dhammapada for Contemplation
Ajahn Munindo
The ancient texts of the Dhammapada rendered into accessible English as themes for personal contemplation.
Nothing is More Joyless Than Selfishness
Ajahn Sumedho
Five talks to the monastic community at Wat Pah Nanachat in May 1989, given by Ajahn Sumedho and transcribed by Bhikkhu Gavesako.
Great Patient One
Ajahn Sucitto
This book is a sequel to Rude Awakenings, which began the account of a six-month epic journey by two Englishmen, a monk and layman, to the Buddhist holy places in India. “While the second part of the journey still had its share of adventure… the novelty of the endeavour had worn off, and we came face to face with both our own and the other’s deeper humanity.”
Rude Awakenings
Ajahn Sucitto
Half raucous adventure and half inspirational memoir, Rude Awakenings documents an unusual pilgrimage. Two very different men — life-loving naturalist Nick Scott and austere Buddhist monk Ajahn Sucitto — together spend six months retracing the Buddha’s footsteps through India… Rude Awakenings is a heady record of survival and spirituality set against the dramatic backdrop of one of India’s most la…
Māra and the Maṅgala
Ajahn Amaro
This story is intended to be both a partner to the novel ‘The Pilgrim Kāmanīta,’ written by Karl Gjellerup in 1906, and a tale that stands on its own. There is no need to have read the earlier book in order to make sense of this one.