Quotes
"A vivid study of who shamans are, and why their practices, which predate organized religion, have endured for centuries. [Singh] deftly weaves together memoir and fieldwork, reporting from places as varied as Indonesia, the Amazon forest, and Burning Man, and reveals how shamanistic traditions have infiltrated both our culture and our politics."
—The New Yorker, "Best Books We Read this Week"
"A panoramic survey: Singh has done the fieldwork, the legwork, and the drugwork.”
—The Atlantic
“Blending memoir, investigative journalism, and anthropological fieldwork, Shamanism is a deep dive into a religious tradition that is as mysterious as it is timeless."
—Time, "Best New Books to Read in May"
"A fascinating compendium of shamanistic behaviour and techniques... Singh writes with a beguiling mixture of erudition and sheer delight in his discoveries. He is also willing to put in the hard yards."
—The Spectator (UK)
"Monumental. . . . Stunningly well-researched."
—Irish Times
“Brilliantly traces the evolution of shamanism across history. . . . Singh makes especially insightful points about how shamanism has engaged in a somewhat contradictory dance with religion, first influencing it and then threatening to siphon away adherents who crave a rawer spiritual experience. . . . Combining meticulous research and an excellent grasp of psychological and sociocultural theories, Singh paints a panoramic portrait of a little-understood subject.”
—Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“What a pleasure to read a book so broad and deep, including as it does both a history of shamanism and a provocative vision of how it manifests in our world today. Shifting easily between personal experience and scholarship, Singh weaves an instructive and entertaining story.”
—Kim Stanley Robinson, New York Times bestselling author of The Ministry for the Future
“What does the practice of shamanism tell us about how the mind works? Through vivid field encounters and cutting-edge research, Manvir Singh shows that shamanism is a psychological universal, emerging wherever humans gather, from Amazonian healing ceremonies to Wall Street trading floors. Singh is a brilliant young scholar and a gifted writer, and the remarkable book will change how you think about religion, spirituality, consciousness, and human nature.”
—Paul Bloom, Professor of Psychology at the University of Toronto, Professor Emeritus of Psychology at Yale University, and author of Psych: The Story of the Human Mind
“Deftly interweaving memoir, journalism, his own anthropological fieldwork, and cutting-edge archaeology, Manvir Singh's Shamanism provides a bracing new look at one of our species' oldest and most characteristically human experiences—reaching into the spiritual realm through the powerful figure of the shaman. Traveling from the Indonesian forest to the wilds of Burning Man, Singh takes us deep into history and the human heart, showing us that this ancient religion is very much present in our lives today.”
—Charles C. Mann, author of The Wizard and the Prophet
“Singh’s Shamanism is a fast-paced, erudite, lyrical adventure through time and space that explores who shamans are, where they come from, what they do, and why we believe—or don’t—in their supposed powers. This wildly enjoyable book will transform how you think about the human mind and the nature of culture.”
—Daniel E. Liebermann, bestselling author of The Story of the Human Body
“Singh’s analysis of the timeless appeal of one of humanity’s most peculiar practices is a gripping read. Shamanism is both a convincing explanation of enigmatic behavior in unfamiliar societies and a seductive gateway to rethinking some of the oddities of life in contemporary globalized cultures.”
—Richard Wrangham, Professor of Human Evolutionary Biology at Harvard University and author of The Goodness Paradox
“A wide-ranging study of a putatively premodern way of knowledge. . . . A provocative treatise, of much interest to students of culture, religious belief, and social science.”
—Kirkus Reviews
“A convincing journey into powerful realms of religious knowing.”
—Library Journal