Zen and the art of tea--the classic book about the Japanese tea
ceremony that is as much a guide to life
For a generation adjusting painfully to the demands of a modern
industrial and commercial society, Asia came to represent an alternative
vision of the good life: aesthetically austere, socially aristocratic,
and imbued with spirituality. The Book of Tea was originally written
in English and sought to address the inchoate yearnings of disaffected
Westerners. In a flash of inspiration, Okakura saw that the formal tea
party as practiced in New England was a distant cousin of the Japanese
tea ceremony, and that East and West had thus met in the tea-cup.
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