Honen was the father of Japanese Pure Land Buddhism and yet he is often overshadowed by his student Shinran. This is curious, since Shinran himself never claimed to teach anything other then what his late master taught him. Quotations from Honen are hard to come by and that alone makes this book worth buying. But aside from Honen's voluminous writings and the scholary account of this extradorniary man's life, this book is embellished with dozens of beautiful images. Most are reproductions of prints from Honen's offical biography (of which this work is an abridgment) while others are photos of statues, pagodas, and depictions of Amida.
The material of Honen's is a combinations of quotations, letters he wrote to disciples, and an abridged 'catechism' of sorts on the practice of nembutsu that he wrote for posterity. It truly is amazing that though his message is essentially so simple that the most uneducated peasent could understand, it nonetheless possesses a philosophical depth comparable to any other school of Buddhism. These 'deeper' aspects of Jodo Buddhism are explained in this book for those who feel inclined to study. Nonetheless, even the above teachings are not in any way superflous to Honen's simple teaching. Honen was a highly erudite, but ultimately practical man who had no patience for aimless philosophical conjecture. Even his highest intellectual achievements do not deviate or detract one iota from his simple message: that all sentient beings, no matter their level of intelligence or moral development, can achieve enlightenment through Amida's primal vow.