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Maya

A Novel

Published by Wisdom Publications
Distributed by Simon & Schuster

About The Book

A stunning debut novel on sex, loss, and redemption.

It is 1975 and India is in turmoil. American Stanley Harrington arrives to study Sanskrit philosophy and escape his failing marriage. When he finds himself witness to a violent accident, he begins to question his grip on reality.

Maya introduces us to an entertaining cast of hippies, expats, and Indians of all walks of life. From a hermit hiding in the Himalayan jungle since the days of the British Raj, to an accountant at the Bank of India with a passion for Sanskrit poetry, to the last in a line of brahman scholars, Stanley’s path ultimately leads him to a Tibetan yogi, who enlists the American’s help in translating a mysterious ancient text.

Maya, literally “illusion,” is an extended meditation on the unraveling of identity. Filled with rich observations and arresting reflections, it mines the porous border between memory and imagination.

About The Author

C. W. "Sandy" Huntington, Jr. translated and interpreted classical Sanskrit and Tibetan texts and was a professor at Hartwick College in Oneonta, New York. He is best known for his books The Emptiness of Emptiness and Maya. Sandy passed away on July 19, 2020, following a six-month struggle with pancreatic cancer.

Product Details

  • Publisher: Wisdom Publications (June 23, 2015)
  • Length: 328 pages
  • ISBN13: 9781614292159

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Raves and Reviews

“The idea of a spiritual quest fills me with melancholy yawns. However, Maya hit me hard so that I finished it in two days. I wasn’t sure I wanted to go along on the ride, but moment by moment I was intrigued. Maya isn’t fueled by pride or intellect, the usual grievous errors. The door to the spirit is humility, and Huntington is to be congratulated for his grace and spiritual power. It’s an uncommonly vital book.”

– Jim Harrison, author of Legends of the Fall

“This is a marvelous book. Huntington brings India alive not as it is, not even as it was, but perfectly as those of us who studied and lived there long ago experienced it. Maya is a loving evocation of a place and time, and a powerfully honest expression of the enthusiasm and pain that attend passions of all kinds, whether for flesh or for truth. Most of all it is a splendid addition to the tradition of stories of how one met one’s guru. This is life not as it is, and yet not otherwise; a perfect evocation of the world of illusion we actually inhabit.”

– Jay Garfield, author of Engaging Buddhism

Maya is a work of the imagination that presents itself as such, and simultaneously asks the reader to ponder how such imagination differs from what we understand as reality. This playfulness connects Maya to traditional East Asian literary practices—such as the classic dream tale—that are inspired by Buddhist theories of the imagination. This is fiction writing that is as philosophical as it is creative, and which turns art into religion without the preachiness or didacticism.”

– Francisca Cho, coauthor of Religion and Science in the Mirror of Buddhism

“I’ve been waiting for someone to write a contemporary “quest for enlightenment” novel, but didn’t expect it to be this good. It evokes all the color and sensuousness—the feel—of 1970s India, along with the hard-won insights of what reads like a painfully honest memoir leading to a powerful conclusion.”

– David R. Loy, author of Money, Sex, War, Karma

“Rich and evocative, packed with unforgettable characters and sensory, aromatic description.”

– Dinty W. Moore, author of The Mindful Writer

“Teaching Maya this semester was a joy. As the final text in an ancient world religions course, this remarkable novel facilitated lively discussions of fictional truth, perception and the nature of reality, sexuality and spiritual awakening, experiential versus academic approaches to religious studies—and it generated important student observations regarding cultural values in the East and West, as well as the exhilarations of expatriate life.”

– Mark S. Ferrara, professor at SUNY Oneonta and author of Palace of Ashes

“C.W. Huntington’s Maya is a compelling and richly textured novel. As a work of narrative philosophy, it is also eminently suitable for an academic course on Buddhist thought. I recently taught a class titled Emptiness and Form: Philosophical and Literary Expressions of the Dharma. Maya worked well . . . giving students a literary lived experience of confusion, desire, the play of reality, and insight. Moreover, Huntington’s novel also explicitly engages . . . early Buddhist discourses, Mahayana sutras, Nagarjuna’s Mulamadhyamakakarika, and Santideva’s Bodhicaryavatara. Exploring central Buddhist ideas and commenting on these classic Buddhist texts, Maya is itself a contemporary work of Buddhist thought . . . My students very much appreciated this experiential study of Buddhist philosophy—with its explorations of sex, desire, confusion, love, learning, meditation, and death . . . Maya gave us new and important perspectives for thinking about how to articulate Buddhist thought, and how our thinking changes when we change genres. I recommend Maya to colleagues interested in teaching courses that explore literary and experiential elements of Buddhist philosophy, as well as anyone interested in curling up on the couch with a good read.”

– William Edelglass, Marlboro College

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