Saltwater Buddha came from the hand of its editor, Eduardo Riestra, who brought it to me personally for a reading here and here I catch you I'll kill you. "Read it, you'll love" and I loved it because it has a touch naive, because it's cool, because I can recommend it to both young readers hungry for books that connect with what they think and feel. Eduardo and I commented that there are certain books, not a few but sometimes difficult to classify, which connect to all kinds of people, regardless age, social class and interests. Books lifeguards are there to make us think, to raise a smile, to separate and record: this book you'll love to foo or Somebody's niece. In this case the story is centered on the author's own biography. Jaimal Yogis, a young surfing enthusiast since his teens looking for a meaning to life and wanted to understand why he had come to the world. Its first foothold was the Zen and Buddhist philosophy combined with his passion surfing, Jaimal found himself after many misunderstandings and false glimmers of light. The sea is present in a fictionalized biography as another character. Is a of these books are happy that we should include in our list of books shared happy and can serve, especially young readers, to make sure they are not as alone as you think, because there are always those who light a lamp and shakes it for others to see its wake and are encouraged to make their own inquiries on the road. Highly recommended. And of course the surfers and water sports should not miss this book.
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