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Albert Camus

Don't walk behind me; I may not lead. Don't walk in front of me; I may not follow. Just walk beside me and be my friend.

Tuesday, May 15, 2018

What to see, what to hear? - 49 Buddhas: Lama Rinzen in the Hell Realm by Jim Ringel

"The first entry in the Lama Rinzen series lays heavy groundwork, introducing a unique detective and hero. Blending elements of philosophy, religion, and the mystery genre to interesting effect, 49 Buddhas is the start of a series to watch." - John

Description:

Releasing in ebook for an Amazon Best Seller Day on May 23rd!!

49 Buddhas tells of Lama Rinzen in the Hell Realm—a realm of confusion, shifting ground, and anger.

Lama Rinzen awakens from meditation to find himself reincarnated as a detective on Denver’s Colfax Avenue. Immediately he realizes that once again he has been reborn into the Hell Realm—this time charged with finding insurance man Sonny Heller’s killer. Rinzen believes finding Heller’s killer will lead to the Sacred Dorje, which has eluded the lama for many lifetimes. By finding the Dorje, he will become a bodhisattva, allowing him to lead all sentient beings to Nirvana. But should the Dorje escape his grasp, Rinzen will be forced to suffer yet another lifetime in Hell, haunted by past demons and his failure to achieve enlightenment. 

EXCERPT

I, Lama Rinzen, awake from meditation and am reborn on Denver’s Colfax Avenue. 

What to see? A darkened apartment. Paper window shades. An altar with a Buddha statue in the center. 

Pool balls break beneath the floorboards. 
And a telephone rings.
What to see, what to hear? That once again I am reborn into the Hell Realm. 
Can I never escape?

The air feels pinched and cold. I see a baby crib in the corner. Beneath the baby crib, a telephone rings. 

My only hope, that this is the lifetime I find the dorje. If only I touch it, immediately I will achieve enlightenment. Not just my enlightenment. Enlightenment for all. 

A telephone rings. I lift its cradle between ear and shoulder.
“I’m looking for Rinzen Naraka. You him?” the phone asks.
“I am.”

“Police headquarters here, detective. Thank goodness you answered. A crime down in the warehouse on 33rd and Josephine, and your number’s up.”

“Number? I am not a detective,” I confess. At least I cannot recall being a detective. Not this lifetime. Not any other. “Why call me? I do not know why Americans kill one another.”

“Look, work with me here. A big shot insurance guy goes and gets himself sliced. Insured some trinket shipment from Asia, and then gets killed.”

I shift the phone from one ear to the other. “Trinket shipment? From where exactly in Asia?”

He harumphs slightly. “I don’t know. Asia. How big can it be?”

“Let me ask. Does the shipment include a dorje?”

“Dorje? Detective, I don’t want to tell you your business. Find who killed the insurance man first. Start at the beginning. Work your way through it, like a detective might. Yeah. Sure, there’s a dorje. I don’t know. Why not?”

Start at the beginning. Find the killer. Because a shipment came in from Asia, and the killer probably did what he did to get his hands on the dorje.

Of the ten negative actions, killing is the worse. Worse than Wrong View. Worse than spreading gossip or having bad sex.

“Look. Go down and talk to Inspector Fernandez,” the telephone says. “33rd and Josephine.”

I do not know this place, 33rd and Josephine. I do not know anyone named Fernandez.

All I know is my mission in life. In all lifetimes. To be a bodhisattva. To bring all beings to enlightenment.

That is how I get out of Hell.

About the author:
Jim Ringel writes the Lama Rinzen Mysteries, with each book set in one of the six Buddhist realms of Hell, Hungry Ghosts, Animals, Humans, Warring Titans, or Gods. In each realm, Rinzen must solve a crime and learn the lesson of the realm so he may progress along his path to enlightenment. The first book of the series comes out in May, 2018.

Jim is a Buddhist practitioner who writes and explores Buddhism in his every day life. His previous works include the novel Wolf, a "sales-werewolf" noir set in a world where vanquished dogs return seeking revenge, and where salesmen sell products they cannot understand.

Jim writes the Writing Like a Buddha blog (www.WritingLikeaBuddha.com), and lives in Colorado with his Tibetan Terrier, Rascal, who is both inspiration and teacher. 


Author's Giveaway
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4 comments:

Rita Wray said...

Sounds like a good book.

Unknown said...

Thanks, Rita. I appreciate your checking out the site and commenting. If you'd like more info about the book or series, check it out at www.jimringel.com.

Thanks again, and happy reading.

Unknown said...

Thank you, Mythical Books. Lots of great reads on your site. Appreciate you including mine.

Happy Reading,

jim

Deb Hollow said...

Great cover, interesting subject.