Ratings1
Average rating4
I am not a farmer. I don't know anything about farming and husbandry, so I can't judge the reliability of the author's methods. Besides, the book also talks about Japanese agriculture, not Vietnamese agriculture. But the book is full of philosophy enough to make us think a lot about ourselves and how we live amid nature. The author said that he isn't a faithful of any religion, but his views reflected many Buddhist philosophies such as no-self, interdependence, non-discrimination between things... or Lao Tzu's effortless (vô vi). That makes me feel admiration for the writer Masanobu Fukuoka