List of works about Jiddu Krishnamurti

Jiddu Krishnamurti or J. Krishnamurti (12 May 1895  17 February 1986) was a writer and speaker on philosophical and spiritual issues. His subject matter included psychological revolution, the nature of the mind, meditation, human relationships, and bringing about positive social change. Works about his life and his philosophy first appeared in the early-20th-century; as of 2011 related works have continued appearing in several subject areas, and in a variety of formats and media.

About the works

Subject biography

Main article: Jiddu Krishnamurti

Jiddu Krishnamurti was born 1895 in the town of Madanapalle in then-colonial India, to a family of middle class Telugu Brahmins. His father was associated with the Theosophical Society, and in the early part of the 20th century young Krishnamurti came to be promoted by the leadership of the Society as the so-called World Teacher, a new messiah. In 1929 he disavowed this role and dissolved the worldwide organization (the Order of the Star) formed to support it. He severed his ties to Theosophy and the Theosophical Society, and declared independence from all religious, philosophical, and cultural disciplines and practices.

He spent the rest of his life presenting a uniquely expressed philosophy of life around the world, asserting that only unflinching self-inquiry can lead to genuine discovery and to resolution of all personal and social conflict. Until his death in 1986 he was constantly stressing the need for a revolution in the psyche of every human being, while positing that such revolution cannot be brought about by any external entity, be it religious, political, or social.

Timeline and availability

Works and news items about Krishnamurti started appearing in the beginning of the 20th century, shortly after his "discovery" as a possible new Messiah. The extraordinary circumstances surrounding young Krishnamurti, and the related proclamations of Theosophical leaders, resulted in intense scrutiny and publicity throughout his "messianic" period. Interest was renewed and amplified by his later repudiation of the so-called World Teacher Project and of Theosophy.[n 1] During his middle years publicity and interest lessened, but did not disappear; by the late 1960s he was firmly reestablished in the public stage, with a corresponding increase in the number of works and news items about him.

Since his death in 1986 books, monographs, research papers in various disciplines, news items etc., in print and other media, have continued to appear, examining various aspects of Krishnamurti and his message.[n 2]

Krishnamurti has additionally been the subject of, or a claimed source of inspiration in, the works of artists in diverse fields (see section Artistic depictions below). They have included playwrights[n 3] and actors,[n 4] musicians, novelists, and at least one choreographer.[n 5]

As of 31 December 2010, according to one source, Krishnamurti-related materials numbered "2,412 works in 4,580 publications in 53 languages and 46,822 library holdings".[n 6]

Listing of works

List guidelines and format

1. With the exception of the section Mass media items, entries for each class type and publishing medium have been listed alphabetically by primary author or creator, and then (in ascending order) by the original publication or release date. In the absence of this date, the earliest dated edition is used. If no other date is available, the date of work is listed when feasible.

2. The expression "JKO [text]" when used in citations represents the document or webpage serial number or id at Jiddu Krishnamurti Online (JKO).

3. Additional editions or imprints (incl. other media formats) of cited works are listed consecutively in ascending date order, separated by double semicolons (;;). Information common to all listed editions appears in the first listing only.

4. List is not meant to be exhaustive and should not be considered a complete representation of works about Jiddu Krishnamurti.

Format: Last, First (date [per point 1 above]). Title [in italics or "quotation marks"].<reference>[comments].<further references as needed [appearing under Notes and sources]>

Principal biographies

Print

The following people were authorized by Krishnamurti to write his biography.[n 7]

Other biographies

A number of biographical works have been published.[n 10] Many are by people who knew Krishnamurti at some point in his life, or had been associates of his for various lengths of time.[n 11] Others are posthumous scholarly or lay works produced with or without the cooperation of people close to him.

Print
Video

Other representations

Among the following works are interpretations, studies, or comparative analyses of his life and message. Krishnamurti did not accept any interpreters, contemporary or future; instead, he advocated the unmediated examination of his work.[n 14]

Print

Bibliographies, indices, and other helpers

Print

Reference resources

Print

Mass media items

Krishnamurti had been in the public spotlight more or less consistently since his adolescence; items about him appeared in mass media and periodical publications throughout his life with varying frequency depending on his perceived topicality.[n 25] After his death, and as of year-end 2010, Krishnamurti's life, message, and perceived influence continued to be the subject of occasional media attention.

The following selections are listed (per media category) by date of issue or release in ascending order, then by author, editor or other creator. If the author etc. is unknown, items are sublisted by publication name or program title.

Broadcast
Online
Print

Artistic depictions

Film, television, and theater
Literature and poetry
Music and song

Krishnamurti's message has found resonance in the life and work of composers, performers and songwriters in a variety of music genres. He has been cited as an influence in the artistic and personal development of pioneering jazz musician John Coltrane[n 36] and has been similarly acknowledged by singer-songwriter Van Morrison,[n 37] and Garry Cobain of the experimental electronic music act The Future Sound of London,[n 38] among others.

Visual arts

The French expressionist sculptor Antoine Bourdelle produced drawings and two bronze busts of him in the 1920s,[n 42] while photographers Cecil Beaton and Edward Weston each shot several portraits and studies, a number of which illustrated Krishnamurti books.[n 43]

Miscellaneous other

Conferences and symposia
Philately
Webpage design

See also

Notes and sources

Sources for notes

Notes

  1. J. Krishnamurti 1929.
  2. Krishnamurti and his philosophy have generated occasional debates in academic journals: Jean L. Mercier and Murari M. Agrawal in the International Philosophical Quarterly (1988–89); John Wren-Lewis and Madan Gopal in the Journal of Humanistic Psychology (1994–96). From InfoTrac and EBSCOhost respectively (subscription required) [infotrac & ebsco]. Retrieved 2010-09-29. Separately from the instances where he or his philosophy were the main subjects, Krishnamurti or his works have been peripherally cited since the mid-20th-century in a wide variety of such journals. An indicative list: Philosophy (October 1949); Journal of Religion and Health (Spring 2006); Journal of Science Education and Technology (June 2003); Daedalus (Fall 1989); Journal of Modern Literature (Summer 1990); Art Journal (Autumn 1998); Economic and Political Weekly (29 September–5 October 2001); The Journal of Military History (July 1999); Studies in East European Thought (September 1996); Rocky Mountain Review of Language and Literature (Autumn 1975); Dance Chronicle (September 2009). From journals archived at JSTOR and EBSCOhost. Retrieved 2010-09-29. (subscription required) [jstor & ebsco].
  3. Blue Dove Online 2004. Promotional/information website for Blue Dove, a musical that premiered 2004 at Los Angeles' Ivar Theatre and had a 3-week stage run. The libretto, (by Englishman Peter Wells) is loosely based on Krishnamurti's life during the time between his "discovery" by Charles Webster Leadbeater and the start of his career as an independent speaker and teacher following the dissolution of the Order of the Star, roughly covering the same time-period as Mary Lutyens' Krishnamurti: The Years of Awakening, listed here.
  4. Schiffman 2007. Article in Back Stage West magazine. "The article presents the views of several actors and actresses about spiritual commitment. Los Angeles theatre artist Kim Terrell said that she has come to integrate the teachings of Indian spiritual writer Jiddu Krishnamurti and Stanislavsky on the importance of awareness." [Abstract (excerpted) from article entry at EBSCOhost. Retrieved 2011-08-17. (subscription required)].
  5. Looseleaf 2009. Article in The Los Angeles Times about collaborative, modern dance and puppet theater work choreographed by Joe Goode, which "incorporates bits of text from ... philosopher Jiddu Krishnamurti".
  6. Works by or about Jiddu Krishnamurti in libraries (WorldCat catalog). Retrieved 2010. A search conducted 31 December 2010 at WorldCat for subject "Krishnamurti, Jiddu" returned over 900 results ["Search for Library items". Retrieved 2010-12-31. Since the 1910s and as of 2011 he has been referenced in works or classified either by his given name (Krishnamurti) or by his family name (Jiddu, or in some cases variations such as Jeddu, usually pre-1933); in general, he was often referred to by the given name only].
  7. Jayakar 1986, p. xi [in "Preface"]; M. Lutyens 1975a, p. ix [in "Foreword"].
  8. White 2005, p. 5246. White thinks that this biography, and generally, "much else written about Krishnamurti ... contains little analytical apparatus to help the reader understand its subject." However he quotes from the biography, and lists it in his sources.
  9. McGhee 2000, p. 1039. "Although there are other volumes [in Lutyens' biography], this one is the most focused on the years Krishnamurti's basic ideas and teachings were formulated."
  10. An early Theosophical work was The Lives of Alcyone (Besant & Leadbeater 2003). Originally published 1924 in two volumes, this was presented as an occult biography of Krishnamurti's reputed past lives. Alcyone was the pseudonym assigned to Krishnamurti in 1910 by his then mentor, influential Theosophist Charles Webster Leadbeater, who had determined Krishnamurti was likely to be the "vehicle" for the so-called Maitreya or World Teacher, a messianic entity. This book by Leadbeater and Besant, then President of the Theosophical Society, describes forty-eight purported reincarnations of Krishnamurti. Alcyone's reported birth-years for these lives ranged from around 70,000 BC to 624 AD (Besant & Leadbeater 2003-1, "[Table:] Forty-Eight Lives of Alcyone", p. 16); M. Lutyens 1975a, pp. 23–24. Krishnamurti's past lives were reputedly recorded via clairvoyant investigations by Leadbeater, who was highly respected for his occult knowledge and abilities by Theosophists. The record of "extraordinary" past lives was offered in support of the authors' claims regarding Krishnamurti's likely messianic status. Most of the material in The Lives of Alcyone was reprinted from an earlier work, 1913's Man: How, Whence, and Whither; a record of clairvoyant investigation (OCLC 871602), also by Besant and Leadbeater, and had been additionally published in serial form in Theosophical journals. The majority of contemporary Theosophists believed the material regarding "Alcyone's lives" to be genuine and important. However it also added to (or started) disputes within Theosophical circles, and has for various reasons been considered controversial inside and outside Theosophy. Among the more obvious reasons: the work's doctrinal nature, and Krishnamurti's later, strongly negative stance towards such matters. (There is no indication that Krishnamurti was involved or cooperated in any way in the production of works about Alcyone's "lives"). Other reasons for the work's controversial nature involve often elaborate interpretations and criticisms of its occult or esoteric provenance or accuracy, by a variety of warring commentators. In the 1960s some Theosophists advanced the view that the findings of Leadbeater's related clairvoyant investigations were the result of "self-projection" (Wood 1964); like other Krishnamurti-related issues, "the lives of Alcyone" have continued, as of 2011 to occasionally be the subject of discussion among theosophists and researchers of Theosophy (Alpheus 2001).
  11. M. Lutyens 2003a, p. 216. Speaking at a meeting of the trustees of the Krishnamurti Foundations in 1976, Krishnamurti had in effect asked his associates to communicate  especially after his death  the impression that his presence and teachings had had on their lives: "If people come here and ask, 'What was it like to live with this man?' would you be able to convey it to them?"; Chandmal 1985, p. 7; Hay, Peter (1989). "Preface". In (author) Field 1989, pp. ix-xv (context at p. xiv). Missing or empty |title= (help); M. Lutyens 1990, pp. 171, 188. He further encouraged, in the last few decades of his life, close associates and friends to share their experiences of him.
  12. J. Krishnamurti 1984.
  13. DVD (in The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles).
  14. J. Krishnamurti 1970b. Statement regarding interpretations of Krishnamurti's message, was published in the official bulletins of all Krishnamurti Foundations [External links (in Jiddu Krishnamurti)]: "From the nineteen twenties I have been saying that there should be no interpreters of the teachings for they distort the teachings and it becomes a means of exploitation. No interpreters are necessary, for each person should observe directly his own activities, not according to any theory or authority. Unfortunately interpreters have sprung up, a fact for which we are in no way responsible. In recent years several people have asserted they are my successors and that they have been specially chosen by me to disseminate the teachings. I have said, and I again repeat, that there are no representatives of Krishnamurti personally or of his teachings during or after his lifetime. I am very sorry that this has to be said again." (M. Lutyens 1983b, pp. 170–171).
  15. Abstract (excerpted) from Worldcat listing (OCLC 490466804). "This study compares the works of J.-P. Sartre and J. Krishnamurti. ... Sartre chooses restless action and pursues positivity  a source of failure. Krishnamurti ... insists on an attitude based on negation and psychological nonaction ... then, sensitivity to what is awakes an intelligence that is love and leads to right action."
  16. Life-altering experiences (in Jiddu Krishnamurti); M. Lutyens 1997, pp. 155–156, 159, 180n. Cite the pepper tree; Nuxoll 2011. "Horan fails to collect seeds from the California pepper tree under which the Indian mystic had his awakening; yet, he effectively describes how Krishnamurti’s teaching showed him a path toward wisdom and compassion."
  17. Publisher's annotation. From the "Summary" section of the work's Worldcat entry (OCLC 690904750).
  18. Réhault 1939, pp. 9, 10. "[Krishnamurti's teachings] have been systematically distorted and wrongly interpreted not only by his enemies, but also by some who profess to be his friends. He himself said publicly to the latter: 'You have come here to pervert what I have to say.'" The author was a member of the Theosophical Society "whose tendencies", he stated, "[he] was far from approving". He was in general agreement with Krishnamurti's new direction, and opposed to leading Theosophists' related criticism.
  19. Samuels 1929, "Foreword" p. 3. (Dated 24 March 1929). "What is it that is so singular about Mr. Krishnamurti? .... The contents of the following pages are heartily offered as a help." The included review of The Pool of Wisdom (1927, Eerde, Ommen: Star Publishing Trust, OCLC 250095568) authored by N.E.B. Ezra.
  20. Life-altering experiences (in Jiddu Krishnamurti). Includes short description and numerous references and footnotes, including interpretations of these events by Krishnamurti and others.
  21. Ionesco 1982, p. 41. "Mrs. Smith: Krishnamurti! Krishnamurti! Krishnamurti!"
  22. [Note this article may contain factual errors as it contradicts primary sources, eyewitness accounts, and historical consensus: Krishnamurti's age when "discovered" is put at 12 instead of 14 years old, while Annie Besant instead of Charles Webster Leadbeater is mentioned as the person who "discovered" him. There are other minor discrepancies regarding early dates. (M. Lutyens 1995)].
  23. J. Krishnamurti 1970a.
  24. [Note article contains factual errors: it states (p. 5244) the dissolution of the Order of the Star as having happened in 1926 instead of 1929. See Jiddu Krishnamurti bibliography: "The Dissolution of the Order of the Star: A Statement by J. Krishnamurti" (September 1929)].
  25. Williams 2004, p. 198. C. V. Williams states that Krishnamurti's "dense" subject matter, his unique use of certain terms, and the difficulties of his language, would sometimes prompt journalists to oversimplify his message and "trivialize his image."
  26. Brockwood Online.
  27. James 1981. "[Levin's] brain is almost in the same shape as Krishnamurti's  bland, moist and cloyingly sweet, like a lichee."; M. Lutyens 2003b, p. 43. "We had high hopes for this [interview and broadcast] but it was not a success."; J. Krishnamurti 1996, "[Chapter:] What is your secret?  Bernard Levin" pp. 190–199. Published transcript of the interview; Krishnamurti Library of Athens 2010. Video of the interview (edited). Uncredited. Not an official release.
  28. [Note weblink in reference is not at official Theosophical Society in America website. Link-specific content verified against original at New York Public Library Main Branch ("YBEA (American theosophist)" (call no.). Classic Catalog. New York Public Library. Retrieved 2010-12-19.)].
  29. 1 2 M. Lutyens 1995, pp. 1–2, footnote 2. "Kumara Shrowtulu, one of the greatest astrologers in the Ceded Districts." Quoted from a 1911 statement by Krishnamurti's father dictated and signed in the presence of two witnesses. It details the circumstances of Krishnamurti's birth. Original [c. 1995] at the Adyar Archive, Theosophical Society Adyar; Theosophist 1932, § "Introduction" p. 42. "I give below a copy of the horoscope in Sanskrit and in translation, made by the Hindu astrologer at the birth of Krishnamurti. ... The original horoscope is in Sanskrit. I presume it is written on palm leaf ..." By C. Jinarajadasa, then a high-ranking Theosophist, who first met Krishnamurti shortly after the latter was "discovered". From an article in the April 1932 issue of The Theosophist magazine. Includes copies of the original Jyotisa (Jataka Shastra) Vedic natal charts and the English translation Theosophist 1932; M. Lutyens 1995. "The copies published by Jinarajadasa were copies of the original in [Krishnamurti's father's] writing". Per the horoscope, Krishnamurti's birth was at 00:30 am local time (GMT+5:30) of Sunday, 12 May 1895 according to the Gregorian calendar, or at 12:30 (past midnight local time) of Saturday, 11 May 1895 according to a westernized rendition of the Hindu calendar. [This date and time was also agreed upon separately by Krishnamurti's father in the 1911 statement. There had been conflicting reports about Krishnamurti's actual birth date and time].
  30. [Note biographical details about the room where Krishnamurti's mother gave birth to him, and information regarding his sexual life, have been superseded, amended or corrected by sources newer than the relevant ones referenced in the article; M. Lutyens 1995, preface. Location of his birth; sexual life: Sloss 1991, p. 117; M. Lutyens 1996, "Chapter 1"].
  31. David Bohm (in Jiddu Krishnamurti bibliography).
  32. JKO. "The Krishnamurti Centres are intended for the study of the teachings of J. Krishnamurti. They are for people who would like to be in an environment of quietness and great natural beauty, where they can give full attention to these teachings and their implications in their own lives." Webpage includes links to the Centres.
  33. Hemanth Rao at the Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 2010-08-03.
  34. The poem is based on Krishnamurti's diaries, see Krishnamurti on Krishnamurti (in Jiddu Krishnamurti bibliography), including the eponymous Krishnamurti's Journal; it was republished in the "Summer 1993" issue of Grand Street (Beyer 1993b).
  35. M. Lutyens 2003a, pp. 31–32; however see Williams 2004, p. 517 [in "Notes": no. 10]; Brophy 1986.
  36. Berkman 2007, p. 44.
  37. Heylin 2003, p. 393; Morrison's 1986 recording No Guru, No Method, No Teacher owes its title to a common Krishnamurti theme  one example is at J. Krishnamurti 1978, para. 15. Retrieved 2011-08-22.
  38. Barcode 2006.
  39. Krishnamurti & Bohm 2009, "Dialogue Seven &#32;part 7 of 8". Retrieved 2011-10-24.
  40. Kokolo Online.
  41. Serinus 2010. Review.
  42. Blau 1995, pp. 66–67; Williams 2004, p. 164.
  43. M. Lutyens 1991, pp. vii [in "Illustrations"], 140. According to Mary Lutyens, Krishnamurti did not allow photographs of him to be taken for over 30 years, from the early 1930s to the late 1960s, "hence the lack of pictures of him in middle age". [She states that he relented in the late 1960s, allowing freelance photographer Mark Edwards to photograph him in 1968. Photographer weblink retrieved 2011-01-20. Edwards eventually shot several portraits of Krishnamurti, some of which illustrate covers of Krishnamurti books. He also covered Krishnamurti gatherings, and undertook various assignments for the Krishnamurti Foundations. See for example J. Krishnamurti 2000. Photobook based on Krishnamurti quotations about nature and the environment with accompanying nature photography from various photographers]; Williams 2004, p. 552 [in "Notes": no. 53]. However private photographs of Krishnamurti in middle-age have been published in Sloss 1991; photographs of him from that era also exist in The Huntington Library, San Marino, California; Coleman 1971, pp. 81, 90, 98. "[Krishnamurti c. 1969] told me he never allowed photographs if he could help it because he was afraid some people might misuse them. There were those who wished to deify him and pictures would give them a means of doing so. The thought horrified him." Coleman, who originally met Krishnamurti in 1958, asked him to allow a photograph as illustration for his book, and added, "He didn't like the idea at all but in the end gave in under pressure." [Note also the listing of portrait by Cecil Beaton is dated 1959].
  44. J. Krishnamurti 2002, Front cover. Retrieved 2010-07-30.
  45. Reproductions: Fontainas 1930, plate 54; Blau 1995, p. 65.
  46. J. Krishnamurti 1975, Front cover. Google Books [web preview publisher]. Retrieved 2010-07-30.
  47. Faculty member profile: Meenakshi Thapan (University of Delhi). ; Lee 2010. Brief conference report, by the ex-CEO of the Krishamurti Foundation of America.
  48. Center for Creative Photography. Copyright and image information for Edward Weston works.
  49. [Note reference weblink is not at Indian Postal Service or other official website].

References

  1. Jayakar, Pupul (1986). Krishnamurti: a biography (1st ed.). San Francisco: Harper & Row. ISBN 978-0-06-250401-2.
  2. Lutyens, Mary (1975a). Krishnamurti: the years of awakening (1st US ed.). New York: Farrar Straus and Giroux. ISBN 978-0-374-18222-9.;; (1st UK ed.). London: John Murray. 1975b. ISBN 978-0-7195-3229-0. Missing or empty |title= (help);; (Reprint of 1st US ed.). New York: Discus. 1983a [1975]. ISBN 978-0-380-00734-9. Missing or empty |title= (help);; [web preview] (Reprint of 1st US ed.). Boston: Shambhala Publications. 1997 [1975]. ISBN 978-1-57062-288-5. Google Books [web preview publisher]. Retrieved 2011-10-04.
  3. (1983b). Krishnamurti: the years of fulfilment (1st US ed.). New York: Farrar Straus and Giroux. ISBN 978-0-374-18224-3.;; (1st UK ed.). London: John Murray. 1983c. ISBN 978-0-7195-3979-4. Missing or empty |title= (help);; [web preview] (1st KFT ed.). Bramdean: Krishnamurti Foundation Trust. 2003a [1983]. ISBN 978-0-900506-20-8. Google Books [web preview publisher]. Retrieved 2011-10-04.
  4. (1988). Krishnamurti: the open door (1st UK ed.). London: John Murray. ISBN 978-0-7195-4534-4.;; [web preview] (1st KFT ed.). Bramdean: Krishnamurti Foundation Trust. 2003b [1988]. ISBN 978-0-900506-21-5. Google Books [web preview publisher]. Retrieved 2011-10-03.
  5. (2005). J. Krishnamurti: A Life. New Delhi: Penguin Books India. ISBN 978-0-14-400006-7.
  6. Balfour-Clarke, Russel (1977). The boyhood of J. Krishnamurti. Bombay: Chetana. OCLC 7328288.
  7. Blackburn, Gabriele (1996). The light of Krishnamurti. Ojai, California: http://www.idylwildbooks.com, Idylwild Books. ISBN 978-0-9613054-4-4.
  8. Blau, Evelyne (1995). Krishnamurti: 100 years. New York: Stewart, Tabori & Chang. ISBN 978-1-55670-678-3.
  9. Chandmal, Asit (1985). One thousand moons: Krishnamurti at eighty-five. New York: Harry N Abrams. ISBN 978-0-8109-1209-0.
  10. Chandmal, Asit (1995). One thousand suns: Krishnamurti at eighty-five and the last walk (hardcover) (1st ed.). New York: Aperture. ISBN 978-0-89381-631-5.
  11. Field, Sidney (1989). Háy, Peter, ed. Krishnamurti: the reluctant messiah. Preface by Peter Háy. St. Paul, Minnesota: www.paragonhouse.com, Paragon House. ISBN 978-1-55778-180-2.
  12. Giddu, Narayan (1998). Narsipur, Chandramouli, ed. As the river joins the ocean: reflections about J. Krishnamurti (hardcover) (1st ed.). Delhi: Book Faith India. ISBN 978-81-7303-178-6.;; (1st US ed.). Ojai, California: Edwin House. 1999. ISBN 978-0-9649247-5-8. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  13. Grohe, Friedrich (1991). The beauty of the mountain: memories of Krishnamurti. Bramdean: Krishnamurti Foundation Trust. OCLC 38028234.
  14. Holroyd, Stuart (1991). Krishnamurti: the man, the mystery, and the message (paperback). Shaftesbury, England: Element. ISBN 978-1-85230-200-9.
  15. Krohnen, Michael (1996). The kitchen chronicles: 1001 lunches with Krishnamurti. Ojai, California: Edwin House. ISBN 978-0-9649247-1-0.
  16. (1957a). Candles in the sun. London: R. Hart-Davis. OCLC 255420902.;; . Philadelphia: Lippincott. OCLC 1548846. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  17. Lutyens, Mary (1990). The life and death of Krishnamurti (1st UK ed.). London: John Murray. ISBN 978-0-7195-4749-2.;; [web preview] (1st KFT ed.). Bramdean: Krishnamurti Foundation Trust. 2003c [1990]. ISBN 978-0-7195-4749-2. Google Books [web preview publisher]. Retrieved 2011-10-04.
  18. (1991). Krishnamurti: his life and death. New York: St Martin's Press. ISBN 978-0-312-05455-7.
  19. (1995). The boy Krishna: the first fourteen years in the life of J. Krishnamurti (pamphlet). Bramdean: Krishnamurti Foundation Trust. ISBN 978-0-900506-13-0.
  20. (1996). Krishnamurti and the Rajagopals. Ojai, California: Krishnamurti Foundation of America. ISBN 978-1-888004-08-3.
  21. Patwardhan, Sunanda (1999). A vision of the sacred: my personal journey with Krishnamurti (paperback). New Delhi: Penguin Books India. ISBN 978-0-14-029447-7.
  22. Ross, Joseph E. (2000). Krishnamurti: the Taormina seclusion 1912. Bloomington, Indiana: XLibris. ISBN 978-0-7388-5198-3.
  23. Sloss, Radha Rajagopal (1991). Lives in the shadow with J. Krishnamurti (1st ed.). London: Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7475-0720-8.;; (1st US ed.). Reading, Massachusetts: Addison–Wesley. 1993 [1991]. ISBN 978-0-201-63211-8. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  24. Smith, Ingram (1989). Truth is a pathless land: a journey with Krishnamurti. Wheaton, Illinois: Theosophical Publishing House. ISBN 978-0-8356-0643-1.
  25. (1999). The transparent mind: a journey with Krishnamurti. Ojai, California: Edwin House. ISBN 978-0-9649247-3-4.
  26. Vernon, Roland (2001). Star in the east: Krishnamurti: the invention of a messiah (1st US ed.). New York: Palgrave. ISBN 978-0-312-23825-4.;; (reprint ed.). Boulder, Colorado: www.sentientpublications.com, Sentient Publications. 2002 [2001]. ISBN 978-0-9710786-8-0. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  27. 1 2 Williams, Christine V. (2004). Jiddu Krishnamurti: world philosopher (1895–1986): his life and thoughts. Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass. ISBN 978-81-208-2032-6. Google Books [web preview publisher]. Retrieved 2011-10-03.
  28. 1 2 (2004). J. Krishnamurti: Crossing cultural borders or ignoring their existence? (pdf). 15th Biennial Conference of the Asian Studies Association of Australia. Canberra, Australia: Australian National University. Retrieved 2010-03-09.
  29. Jiddu, Krishnamurti; Krishnamurti Foundation of America (Producer) (1995). The next 100 years: the future of Krishnamurti's teachings (flv) (Webcast). Ojai, California: Krishnamurti Foundation of America. Retrieved 2010-02-12.
  30. George Lucas (Producer) et al. (2007-10-23). The early years disk 7: the journey of radiance (DVD). Los Angeles: CBS DVD; Paramount Home Entertainment. Event occurs at "Special features: Jiddu Krishnamurti: the reluctant Messiah". ISBN 978-1-4157-3460-5. The adventures of young Indiana Jones Series. Retrieved 2010-08-03.
  31. Michael Mendizza (Director) (1990). Krishnamurti: with a silent mind (Motion picture). Ojai, California: www.kfa.org, Krishnamurti Foundation of America. Retrieved 2010-05-22.
  32. Agrawal, Murari M. (2002). "§§ Krishnamurti I, Krishnamurti II". Freedom of the soul: a post-modern understanding of Hinduism. New Delhi: Concept Publishing. pp. 118–142 [cumulative]. ISBN 978-81-8069-002-0. Google Books [web preview publisher]. Retrieved 2011-10-27.
  33. Boutte, Veronica (2002). The phenomenology of compassion in the teachings of Jiddu Krishnamurti, (1895–1986). Asian thought and religion. 24. Lewiston, New York: Edwin Mellen Press. ISBN 978-0-7734-7090-3.
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