THE ENNEAGRAM: Symbol of All and Everything
Lago Sul, Brazil: Gilgamesh, 2003. First printing. 414 pages;. More
Lago Sul, Brazil: Gilgamesh, 2003. First printing. 414 pages;. More
Santa Fe: Bennett Books, 1992. First edition. 116 pages. More
Eureka, 1996. 72 pages. More
Claymont, 1978. 193 pages. More
Sherborne: Coombe Springs, 1975. First edition. 34 pages. More
Claymont, 1989. First printing. 129 Pages. More
Quacks Books, 1995. First printing. Compiled by Lewis Creed; Limited to 500 copies; 380 pages. More
Fairfax: Arete, 1998. Second printing. 312 pages. More
Santa Fe: Bennett Books, 2007. 131 pages. Compiled from conversations that took place between John Bennett and his students from 1971 to 1974, and with independent contributions from some of his pupils, Enneagram Studies is a unique collection of lucid explanations and applications of this universal symbol. From the transformation..... More
Santa Fe: Bennett Books, 2008. Foreword by Anthony Blake; 139 pages. Bennett viewed Beelzebub's Tales to His Grandson as the work of superhuman genius, containing expressions of reality which were bound to make severe demands on any reader. With Gurdjieff's approval, he undertook a series of lecture in London between..... More
Tucson: Presidio Press, 2024. First edition. 347 pages. This book contains excerpts from seventy-three meetings held by Mr. Nyland between 1964 and 1975 in various cities in the United States. These explain the purpose, method, and results of exercises given by him to help people apply the ideas of Gurdjieff..... More
New York: Harper & Row, 1979. First edition. Review slip laid in; 151 pages. Contributions include 'Meetings with Remarkable Men' by P.L. Travers, 'Searching Home' by Roger Lipsey, 'Ten Oxherding Pictures' introduced by William Segal and 'Common Miracles' by Peter Matthiessen. More
Occidental: Land House, 2005. Second edition. Two volumes; Compiled by Willem Nyland and his groups; Not to be confused with the Traditional Studies Press 'Guide and Index', this one differs first by being especially reflective of Mr Nyland's perspective of which words and topics should receive focus, and that for..... More