Gates is a modern American transcontinental settler, with a strangely
settling and disturbingly unsettling tale to tell. This is a work of great
courage both in the living and in the writing. Her generosity of heart
shines through on every page.
Jon Kabat-Zinn, author of Wherever you go, There You Are
This is the sort of book one is homesick for after finishing it. Honest,
searching, and as engrossing as a mystery, it pulled me onward. It's a
marvelous meditation on how the fear of change and mortality has led us
to destroy in the name of preserving.
Annie Gottlieb, author of Do You Believe in Magic? and The Cube: Keep
the Secret
The daily particularities of living in Berkeley, the exploration of
its history and geology and the venturing forth into the great mysteries
and uncertainties of life, love, and time is done with equal honesty, ease,
and wisdom. A satisfying, nourishing, ultimately insightful book.
Malcolm Margolin, author of The Ohlone Way
Spanning geologic time and the vast reaches of the human heart, Barbara
Gates offers an honest and sensitive look at how we might more fully inhabit
our lives. This book is a testament to the healing power of connection
with ourselves and with the world around us.
Sharon Salzberg, author of Lovingkindness and Faith
This book shows us the way to find a deeper connection to our family,
our neighborhood, and ultimately, all that lives. It inspires us to stop,
to look, to see our unique place in a world that is constantly changing,
to discover the true meaning of home.
Howard Cutler, M.D., coauthor with the Dalai Lama of The Art of Happiness
As if Thoreau moved his cabin to your neighborhood street corner, Already
Home is a beautiful and tender reminder to honor the life around you.
Jack Kornfield, author of A Path With Heart and After the Ecstasy,
the Laundry
Ultimately, this beautifully written memoir succeeds in proving to each
of us, that all of our lives are shared limitlessly, with our neighbors,
the garden plants, and the toxic waste dumps that surround us, that we
are linked with all those beings who have lived and died before us if we
can summon the love and guts to see it.
Kate Wheeler, author of When Mountains Walked
Gates is a detective, honest and committed in her search for meaning,
uncovering the many layers of home.
Sue Bender, author of Plain and Simple
Gates walks her talk-- literally. Thanks to her wild curiosity and total
lack of sentimentality, her courage is infectious. She inspires me to seize
the moment and live more fully.
Joanna Macy, author of Widening Circles and World as Lover, World as
Self
So many of us have been uprooted, scattered across continents, disconnected
from our geographic, cultural, and family origins. Barbara Gates's book
is a profound and lyrical exploration of our common homelessness.
Wes Nisker, author of Essential Crazy Wisdom and Buddha's Nature
Self and home, garden and neighborhood are continually reborn, with
each shift of attention, into the vibrant particular-ness that is never
apart from the sacred ground of all place and all time.
Sylvia Boorstein, author of Pay Attention for Goodness' Sake
It is an unusual and sometimes thrilling experience‹despite the Buddhist
stillness that characterizes Gates' beautiful, intelligent and often lyric
prose‹to be a witness to the exquisite, naked, scrupulous, spiritual practice
of the process of changing one's mind. Realigning herself with, and stringently
re-valuing, the history and inhabitants of this region, Gates reunites
herself and her readers with the land, with land itself. (read the entire
review)
Deena Metzger, Entering the Ghost River
Shambhala Sun review
Gates took a good look around and beneath her neighborhood, studying
its sociology, geology, history and spirit. The result is a reflective
exploration that inspires readers to examine the meaning of home and family.
(Read the entire review)
Susan Parker
San Francisco Chronicle
What would it mean to locate ourselves precisely in the great unfolding
web of the universe? Barbara Gates took up the challenge, becoming a cartogographer
of the spirit who set about creating a many-dimensional map of "home".
Gracefully written, precisely observed, deeply felt, Already Home may send
you out to discover the rich history of your own neighborhood and send
you in to listen to your body, heart and mind.
Sandy Boucher, author of Hidden Spring:
A Buddhist Woman Confronts Cancer
Turning Wheel review
. . .what started as a quest for wellness evolved into a profound exploration
of the environment and her place in it, as well as a deeper sense of what
it means to be "home." The results of her journey are recorded in
Already Home, a poignant and inspiring memoir that interweaves themes of
family and friendship, ecology and Buddhism, health and home with one woman's
search for connection with the world around her. (Read the entire review)
Georgia Rowe
Contra Costa Times, Time Out
While squaring off against a life-threatening illness, Barbara Gates
decided to pay more attention to where she lived and what was going on
around her. Gates plunges into an examination of Berkeley California,
going all the way back to the shellmound of Native Americans 5,000 years
ago and the geological history of the Bay and the hills. This salutary
exploration of the soul of a place is quite inspiring. (Read the entire
review)
Frederic and Mary Ann Brussat
Spirituality and Health review
The cofounder and coeditor of the Inquiring Mind provides a thoughtful,
elegantly written exploration of the boundary between self and place. Gates¹s
book-length essay details her years-long effort to know and inhabit her
world, her community, her neighborhood, her body, and her selfan encourages
us to do the same in our own lives.
Phil Catalfo
Yoga Journal review
Gates' sensitive exploration of the dynamics within her own small sphere
of this planet raises questions for all readers about how we connect with
our families, ourselves and those living near us. Already Home is a reflective
meditation written by an author who's worked with such notables as the
Dalai Lama and Thich Nhat Hanh. Gates admits that the Buddhist view "forms
the lens" through which she perceives her neighborhood. For all readers,
regardless of background, this book can be a compelling reminder to look
around more closely at the world we call our home.
Barbara Sloane
The Montclarion review
Gates plunges herself into the tragic (suicides, people sleeping on
sidewalks) as well as the delightful (neighborhood gatherings, backyard
gardening, conversations with the mailman), delivering a wise and moving
meditation on all that goes into the making of home.
Frances Lefkowitz
Body and Soul Magazine review
Through the pages of her sweetly revealing memoir, Already Home: A Topography
of Spirit and Place, Gates offers a social, historic exploration of her
'hood, beautifully written in a journalistic style that explains the migration
of communities (flora and fauna, people, businesses and social movements)
and celebrates the fundamental nature of extended family and home.
Susan Parker, author of Tumbling After
The Daily Planet review
Already Home is a treasury of all the things that matter--people, pavements,
worn steps, dogs, ache in the heart, fear, small acts of courage or kindness,
weeds, creek beds, pilgrimage through the ordinary. All through I
can hear her voice--elegantly simple, but sinuously layered. She¹s
worked this material until it shines, until its fragrance is released.
Susan Murphy
Australian film maker, Blind Love Tango
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