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Jeet Kune Do: Bruce Lee's Commentaries on the Martial Way (Bruce Lee Library) Books
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Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Very Good Addition to the Tao of JKD
This book is a great addition to the original Tao of JKD book. It has even more thoughts of Bruce Lee compiled in this good sized book. You can never stop learning from all his books. There seems to be something new every time! It's just up to us to take what he has written and transform it to our own way...our own JKD...which is what the total product is of "honestly expressing yourself"...which I think can take a man 100 years or more. So read up, learn, and train hard!

Be Water, My Friend. - Bruce Lee



Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - More Evidence Bruce Lee Died Too Early
Like the bestselling Tao of Jeet Kune Do, this book is a compilation of short sayings, quotes, excerpted comments and observations by the most influential martial artist in history. What is frustrating about it, and it's not the fault of the publisher or writer, is that it seems as though Bruce was never able to really complete his thought. He was constantly evolving so you're never quite sure at what point in that evolvement he is making the comment. Was it before he abandoned Wing Chun? After he worked with Joe Lewis? In Seattle? Oakland? Hong Kong before or after immigrating to the U.S.?

Bruce Lee was a genius. It's very difficult to pin a genius down or "freeze them" so they are the same forever. With his early passing though, we are left with little else of this man's actual work in the martial arts (not films) than these compilations and the observations of his training partners such as Joe Lewis, Danny Inosanto, Chuck Norris and Mike Stone in books such as Lewis's How to Master Bruce Lee's Fighting System.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Very detailed and thorough
Speaking as a student and teacher of martial arts myself for almost 40 years, this is a very detailed and thorough discussion of Lee's ideas. There's so much detail here that one problem is organizing it successfully so it can be presented in a coherent and structured way, but Little does an excellent job of that too. This book will be of interest too all those interested in Lee and his ideas on martial arts.

I won't try to go into too many of Lee's ideas about fighting, which wouldn't be practical in such a short review, anyway, but I would like to make one comment. One thing you'll notice in this book is that Lee spends a lot of time discussing strategy and principles rather than techniques. He comes back again and again to such notions as timing, distance, interval, gauging your opponent, knowing when and how to attack, creating your own openings, etc., rather than discussing the technical details of technique per se. This is because the book pretty much assumes you've already achieved the necessary physical and mechanical skills and attributes--speed, power, coordination, and so--and are looking for how to progress from there, having already built a solid foundation. This book will help you do that by focusing on the more advanced principles and tactics.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Learn for life
I was twelve years old when a friend asked me if I wanted to learn martial arts. He was in his late twentys and a confident martial artist of asin desent. I got beat up alot, so I said yes. We went into a basement of my building and he said that this will be the best thing that will happen to me. He taught me chinese philosophy for one year then he taught me wing chung. After three years I told him that bruce lee was my favorite fighter, I liked his power, his calmness, and his stlye. Which I found out that it is'nt a style at all. It's a way of life. I am now thirty seven years old. and thanks to my sensi, I also teach neighborhood kids and some adults the art of being ones self in war or at home. Jeet kune do has made me a better person overall. my special thanks to mr.bruce lee for being a giving individual with a heart of gold. Oh yeah my martial arts skills are very unorthodoxed and very hard to beat. I've only had one real fight since the age of thirteen. In the words of bruce himself, the best way to fight is not to fight, use your mind.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Bruce Lee's ultimate definition of Jeet Kune Do
This book exposes Jeet Kune Do on all levels. Bruce Lee explains in depth the philosophy as well as the offensive/deffensive positions of JKD. There are also many visuals giving the reader a clear view of what Lee is explaining. I've gone through this book numerous times, and I still have not found it to lack anything. I highly recommend this book for anyone looking into JKD.


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