THE GETHSEMANI ENCOUNTER: A DIALOGUE ON THE SPIRITUAL LIFE BY BUDDHIST AND CHRISTIAN MONASTICS.
New York: Continuum, 1998. First edition. 306 pages. More
New York: Continuum, 1998. First edition. 306 pages. More
New York: Paulist Press, 1991. First edition. 224 pages. More
New York: Harper Collins, 1992. First edition. More
Winona Lake: Rodeheaver, Hall-Mack, 1947. 111 pages. More
Nashville: Broadman & Holman, 2003. First printing. 340 pages. More
Paris: French Library of Fine Arts, 1939. First edition. Foreword titled 'What was the Beauty of Jesus?' by Francois Mauriac; Numerous black-and-white plates plus 24 tipped in color plates; 128 pages. More
London: Longmans, Green, 1903. First edition. 220 pages. More
St. Bonaventure University, 1980. 69 pages. More
Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1918. First edition. Slight crack to seem at title page; 49 pages. More
New York: Horizan, 1960. Firsy U.S. More
Presenation copy signed by the author; 110 pages. More
New Delhi: Reality Publications, 1985. First Indian edition. Presenation copy signed by the author; 335 pages. More
New York: Sheed & Ward, 1956. First edition. 183 pages. More
New York: Putnams, 2002. First edition. Signed by the author on the title page; 371 pages. Jacob Needleman takes a new sounding of the inner beliefs and spiritual sensibilities of the great iconic figures of America. His powerfully conceived portraits show us George Washington as the great symbol of selfless..... More
New York: Putnams, 2002. 371 pages. Jacob Needleman takes a new sounding of the inner beliefs and spiritual sensibilities of the great iconic figures of America. His powerfully conceived portraits show us George Washington as the great symbol of selfless impartiality; Thomas Jefferson as the embodiment of the communal search..... More
New York: Putnams, 2002. First edition. 371 pages. Jacob Needleman takes a new sounding of the inner beliefs and spiritual sensibilities of the great iconic figures of America. His powerfully conceived portraits show us George Washington as the great symbol of selfless impartiality; Thomas Jefferson as the embodiment of the..... More
New York: Tarcher / Penguin, 2007. First edition. 285 pages. In Why Can't We Be Good? Needleman identifies the core problem that therapists and social philosophers fail to see. He depicts the individual human as a being who knows what is good, yet who remains mysteriously helpless to innerly adopt..... More
New York: St. Martin's, 1995. First edition. More
Chicago: Monastery Hill Bindery, 1968. Hand set, and produced on specially made paper from three color negatives by offset lithography. More
London: Vincent Stuart, 1958. 153 pages. More
London: Stuart and Walkins, 1961. 153 pages. More
New York: Hermitage House, 1951. First US edition. 153 pages. More
London: James Clarke, N.D., c. 1940. More
Leiden: Brill, 1982. First edition. 396 pages. More