Books
- About Peace (ISBN 1-59003-003-6)
- Advanced Taekwondo (ISBN 0-8048-3640-X)
- Bangkok and the Nights of Drunken Stupor (ISBN 1-877792-06-3)
- Cambodian Refugees in Long Beach, California: The Definitive Study (ISBN 1-877792-02-0)
- Bus Rides (ISBN 1-877792-23-3)
- Chi Kung for Beginners: Master the Flow of Chi for Good Health, Stress Reductions & Increased Energy (ISBN 0-7387-0419-9)
- E.Q. (ISBN 1-877792-07-1)
- Gods In Polyester: A Survivors' Account Of 70's Cinema Obscura (Contributor)
- Hapkido: Essays on Self-Defense (ISBN 1-877792-42-X)
- Hapkido: Korean Art of Self-Defense (ISBN 0-8048-2074-0)
- Independent Filmmaking: Secrets of the Craft (ISBN 1-877792-49-7)
- In the Foreboding Shadows of Holiness (ISBN 1-877792-17-9
- Junk: The Back Streets of Bangkok (ISBN 1-877792-05-5)
- L. A. Tales from the Suburban Side of Hell (ISBN 1-877792-18-7)
- Last Will & Testament According to the Divine Rites of the Drug Cocaine (ISBN 1-877792-00-4)
- Los Angeles Koreatown: An Urban Geographical View of the Factors That Lead to Its Inception & Its Current Urbanization (ISBN 1-877792-09-8)
- Love Lived Too Long (ISBN 1-877792-21-7)
- Marguerite Duras And Charles Bukowski: The Yin And Yang Of Modern Erotic Literature (ISBN 1-877792-45-4)
- Mastering Health: The A to Z of Chi Kung (ISBN 8-178222-72-8)
- No Kisses for the Sinner (ISBN 1-877792-12-8)
- Nirvana in a Nutshell: 157 Zen Meditations (ISBN 1-59003-017-6)
- On the Hard Edge of Hollywood (ISBN 1-877792-38-1)
- Sake in a Glass, Sushi with Your Fingers: Fifteen Minutes in Tokyo (ISBN 1-877792-22-5)
- Samurai Zen (ISBN 1-57863-104-1)
- Sanskrit, the Language: Inception and Modern Day Ramifications (ISBN 1-877792-10-1)
- Scream of the Buddha (ISBN 1-877792-55-1)
- Scream: Southeast Asia & the Dream (ISBN 1-877792-01-2)
- Shama Baba ISBN (1-877792-15-2)
- Scribbles on the Restroom Wall (ISBN 1-877792-53-5)
- Shanghai Whispers Shanghai Screams (ISBN 1-877792-26-8)
- Shattered Thoughts (ISBN 1-877792-44-6)
- Siam Tracy (ISBN 1-877792-25-X)
- Simple Bliss: Nirvana Made Easy (ISBN 1-86204-850-9)
- Suicide Slowly (ISBN 1-877792-14-4)
- Taekwondo Basics (ISBN 0-8048-3484-9)
- The History of the Hmong
- The Ki Process: Korean Secrets for Cultivating Dynamic Energy (ISBN 0-87728-879-8)
- The Little Book of Yoga Breathing: Pranayama Made Easy (ISBN 1-57863-301-X)
- The Tao of Self-Defense (ISBN 1-57863-190-4)
- The Most Beautiful Woman in Shanghai (ISBN 1-877792-24-1)
- The Passionate Kiss of Illusion (ISBN 1-877792-04-7)
- There Is No Wind Through the Trees on a Treeless Beach (ISBN 1-877792-11-X)
- The Screenplays (ISBN 1-877792-48-9)
- The Voodoo Buddha (ISBN 1-877792-56-X)
- The Warrior Is Silent: Martial Art and the Spiritual Path (ISBN 0-89281-668-6)
- The Zen of Everything (ISBN 1-877792-40-3)
- TKO: Lost Nights in Tokyo (ISBN 1-877792-08-X)
- War (ISBN 1-877792-17-9)
- Wet Dreams and Placid Silence (ISBN 1-877792-19-5)
- Wo' Ton of the Blue Vision (ISBN 1-877792-16-0)
- Yoga the Inner Journey (ISBN 0-595-16549-4)
- Zen and Modern Consciousness (ISBN 1-877792-52-7)
- Zen Buddhism: The Pathway to Nirvana (ISBN 1877792365)
- Zen Filmmaking (ISBN 1-877792-47-0)
- Zen in the Blink of an Eye (ISBN 1-877792-4-11)
- Zen: Tales from the Journey (ISBN 1-877792-43-8)
- Zen O'Clock: Time to Be (ISBN 1-57863-124-6)
- Zero One (ISBN 1-877792-20-9)
Read more about this topic: Scott Shaw
Famous quotes containing the word books:
“I alternate between reading cook books and reading diet books.”
—Mason Cooley (b. 1927)
“So here they are, the dog-faced soldiers, the regulars, the fifty-cents-a-day professionals riding the outposts of the nation, from Fort Reno to Fort Apache, from Sheridan to Stark. They were all the same. Men in dirty-shirt blue and only a cold page in the history books to mark their passing. But wherever they rode and whatever they fought for, that place became the United States.”
—Frank S. Nugent (19081965)
“Ideas are only lethal if you suppress and dont discuss them. Ignorance is not bliss, its stupid. Banning books shows you dont trust your kids to think and you dont trust yourself to be able to talk to them.”
—Anna Quindlen (b. 1952)