Customer Reviews
Quite simply brilliant - By: Daniel Storey, 15 Nov 2008 
Quite simply one of thes best books i have personally ever readin my 27 years.
No amount of views good book reviews could do this book justice, the only thing that could would be if you gave this book to everyone as soon as they learnt to read.
The Dalai Lama's is quite a special person who despite everything he has been thoughin Tibet still has so much warmth & compassion.
This book is a simple read yet within it's pages contains so much knowledge & wisdom that if all of us on the planet put into practice the world would be a very different pace indeed.
Stop reading this review & go & get hold of a copy of this bookin anyway you can & simply, enjoy!
good book, easy to read and understand - By: Crazy Foo, 20 Jul 2008 
I personally found this book very helpful & enjoyed reading it. It is nice to be able to see things from a positive perspective & this book helps you to do that. Although it is probably worth mentioning that none of the wonderful ideasin this book will work without alott of effort & self discipline. It covers attitude & philosophy & does not include any real techniques or methods, but there are other books that do, & i find this book to compliment them well.
If you have a problem with the idea of trying to be a better person & the effort that it involves, then you may not find this book useful.
This book is mostly just words.(no pun intended)
Although if you consider the harm that cruel words can do, then surely kind words can help to ease the pain of others? As long as the words are sincere, then actions will, by definition, follow. I think sometimes it helps just to know that someone cares.
I am happier as a result of reading the ideas in this book! - By: Ms. R. A. Brown, 14 Apr 2008 
This is an excellent book. Easy to read, uplifting, clear & full of strong & deep ideas.
If you arein any way hesitating about buying this book, don't! You will be very glad you did.....and happier.....
Drivel - By: William Podmore, 26 Mar 2008 
If pretty words, wishful thinking & prayer (all the same thing, actually) changed the world, we'd all be already livingin a better world. But they don't - you have to grow up & stop living the dream, yours, or even worse, somebody else's. And stop hankering after 'lost wisdom' from the 'mystic east' & other such childishness.
The style of this book lets it down - By: Brida, 21 Feb 2008 
I first came to this book after one of my counselling clients mentioned that he had been reading it, & that he thought it had helped him to further understand how he needed to change. Intrigued, I decided to get my hands on the book to see if I could discover why he found it so useful.
As you could expect from a book that has the involvement of the Dalai Lama, what I found was a very spiritual, compassionate discourse on life. However, like a previous reviewer, I also found that the voice of Howard Cutler lets this book down. Although I can understand why they have decided to tackle this subjectin the way they have - the book is set out as an interview between the two men, interspersed with anecdotes from Cutler's own experience - I feel that it takes focus away from the Dalai Lama's voice. I would prefer this book if it was just a commentary by the Dalai Lama.
That gripe aside, I think THE ART OF HAPPINESS is a delightful way to bring Western thinkers around to another way of seeing life & themselves. As a way of introducing Tibetan Buddhism, this book is a triumph - it is engaging, enjoyable, thought-provoking & an easy way of beginning an interestin this philosophy.
If you read this & enjoy it, I would also recommned that you then go & read some work by Thich Nhat Hanh, a Buddhist monk who writes beautiful books on Buddhism.