- The Exquisite Risk: Mark Nepo explores the inner dimensions of holding nothing back and practicing love, compassion, listening and mystery in all that we do.
- The Secret Life of God: David Aaron has created an imaginative spiritual exploration of the challenges we all face as agents of the divine in the unfolding of the world.
- Writing the Sacred Journey: Elizabeth J. Andrew has given us an engaging and creative handbook for those courageous souls taking on the creative and ethical challenge of writing a spiritual memoir.
- Being Zen: Ezra Bayda suggests living a lifewith anger, fear, pain, and suffering, acknowledging and being curious about them in the Buddhist way.
- The Wisdom Way of Knowing: Cynthia Bourgeault has produced a bold and visionary work reclaiming the "lost" cosmology of Wisdom to awaken the heart.
- Radical Acceptance: Tara Brach's lively and diverse compendium of spiritual practices teaches us to tap into our innate goodness and to draw it out.
- The Book of Secrets: Deepak Chopra probes the mysteries of life and the many meanings that lie within us all.
- The Circle of Life: Editor David Cohen charts rites of passage in 73 countries — birth and childhood, initiation and adolescence, marriage and adulthood, death and remembrance.
- Women Who Run with the Wolves: Clarissa Pinkola Estes explores various ways to reclaim and care for our souls.
- Taking Our Places: Norman Fischer offers an accessible and profound Buddhist overview of the essentials of spiritual maturity that enables us to grow naturally into our true selves.
- The Diamond in Your Pocket: Gangaji presents a spiritual message based on the bounties that come with an acceptance of your precious essential self.
- Who Are You? 101 Ways of Seeing Yourself: Malcolm Godwin's book is a fine traveling companion over the years as you change in mind, body, and soul.
- Emotional Intelligence: Daniel Goleman demonstrates how emotional intelligence contributes to the fullest development of selfhood.
- Building Self-Esteem: Anselm Gruen speaks boldly and broadly about the nature of Christian faith, grace, mystery, prayer, and personal transformation.
- The Force of Character and the Lasting Life: James Hillman shows how our character is deepened, enriched and made meaningful by long life.
- Seven Sins for a Life Worth Living: Roger Housden espouses an imaginative and challenging advocacy of pleasure in everyday life.
- A Passion for the Possible: Jean Houston shows how to tap the resources of our souls and realize our true potential.
- Coming Out Spirituality: Christian de la Huerta challenges gays and lesbians to reclaim some of the spiritual roles they have played in the past.
- Loving Yourself: Daphne Rose Kingma suggests ways to nurture and bring out the best that is within you.
- It's Up to You: Dzigar Kongtrul presents heartfelt Buddhist teachings on training the mind, going beyond self-importance, and finding your place in the world.
- The Importance of Being Foolish: Brennan Manning challenges Christians to give up reliance upon security, pleasure, and power and to live like Jesus instead.
- Original Self: Thomas Moore ponders the multiple meanings of original self.
- Invisible Acts of Power: Caroline Myss has produced a timely work on the ways in which we use our energy and the immense benefits that accrue from generosity, kindness, and compassion.
- Let Your Life Speak: Parker J. Palmer, a Quaker, outlines his own pilgrimage toward selfhood and vocation.
- True Self/False Self: M. Basil Pennington, a Trappist monk, challenges us to love ourselves for God's sake and to become all we were meant to be.
- On Women Turning Seventy: Cathleen Roundtree profiles 16 women who share their feelings about conscious aging.
- Infinite Life: Robert Thurman presents ethical exercises and meditations that reveal the bounties of selflessness, interconnections, and a joyous path of freedom.
- Becoming Human: Jean Vanier, founder of l'Arche, assesses the process of becoming human.
- I'm Too Young to be Seventy: Judith Viorst's playful and funny observations on aging in a country where everyone seems to want to be young forever.
- Crossing the Unknown Sea: David Whyte examines the union of work and soul, yearning and satisfaction.
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