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Richard Bach

Author of Jonathan Livingston Seagull

58+ Works 25,041 Members 402 Reviews 64 Favorited

About the Author

A direct descendant of the composer Johann Sebastian Bach, Richard Bach was born in Oak Park, Illinois, in 1936. He attended Long Beach State College in 1955 and had a successful career in aviation, as an Air Force pilot, a flight instructor, an aviation mechanic, and an editor for Flying magazine. show more Jonathan Livingston Seagull, the novel that made him famous, was written as the result of a vision. Halfway through the book, the vision disappeared and, finding that he was unable to continue, Bach, put the novel aside. When the vision reappeared, Bach finished the work. Jonathan Livingston Seagull, published in 1972, was an unexpected success and became the best-selling book in the United States for that year. The book is heavily influenced by Bach's love of flying and provides a marvelous inspirational message. The Bridge Across Forever: A Love Story, One, Messiah's Handbook: Reminders for the Advanced Soul (2004), and Hypnotizing Maria (2009) are some of his other novels that blend inspiration, love, fantasy, and hope. In recent years Bach has written Thank Your Wicked Parents: Blessings from a Difficult Childhood (2012), Rainbow Ridge and Travels with Puff: A Gentle Game of Life and Death (2013), NiceTiger, (Bowker Author Biography) He is the author of eleven books, including Stranger to the Ground, Biplane, A Gift of Wings, Illusions, One, and Running from Safety. (Publisher Provided) show less
Image credit: Офиц. сайт Баха

Series

Works by Richard Bach

Jonathan Livingston Seagull (1970) 12,099 copies, 214 reviews
Illusions: The Adventures of a Reluctant Messiah (1977) — Author — 4,835 copies, 78 reviews
The Bridge Across Forever: A True Love Story (1984) 1,815 copies, 25 reviews
One (1988) 1,650 copies, 20 reviews
There's No Such Place as Far Away (1976) 828 copies, 5 reviews
A Gift of Wings (1974) 769 copies, 11 reviews
Stranger to the Ground (1963) 353 copies, 5 reviews
Biplane (1974) 326 copies, 5 reviews
Nothing by Chance (1980) 295 copies, 3 reviews
Rescue Ferrets at Sea (2002) 162 copies, 2 reviews
Hypnotizing Maria (2009) 141 copies, 6 reviews
Air Ferrets Aloft (2002) 127 copies, 4 reviews
Mensagens para sempre (1999) 14 copies
Aforizmalar (2012) 3 copies
Double Bucky Shanghai (1987) 2 copies
Meraklilar (2011) 2 copies
Maxims and Quotes (2018) 1 copy
Izvan sebe (2000) 1 copy
پندار 1 copy
Jedro 1 copy

Associated Works

Jonathan Livingston Seagull [1973 film] (1973) — Original book — 54 copies, 1 review
Eleven American Stories — Contributor — 1 copy

Tagged

20th century (77) allegory (124) American (93) American literature (94) animals (86) autobiography (57) aviation (155) Bach (57) biography (76) birds (84) classic (78) classics (98) fantasy (279) favorites (51) fiction (2,253) flight (66) flying (50) goodreads (49) inspiration (111) inspirational (345) literature (180) memoir (50) metaphysics (46) narrativa (57) New Age (192) non-fiction (137) novel (269) own (83) paperback (84) philosophy (722) read (292) religion (126) Richard Bach (122) romance (57) seagulls (72) self-help (87) spiritual (163) spirituality (497) to-read (400) unread (52)

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Bach, Richard
Legal name
Bach, Richard David
Birthdate
1936-06-23
Gender
male
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Oak Park, Illinois, USA
Places of residence
Ashland, Oregon, USA
Orcas Island, Washington, USA
Winter Haven, Florida, USA
Ottumwa, Iowa, USA
Long Beach, California, USA
Education
California State University, Long Beach (Long Beach State College)
Occupations
pilot
novelist
Relationships
Fineman, Bette Bach (wife|divorced)
Bach, James Marcus (son)
Parrish, Leslie (wife|divorced)
Organizations
United States Air Force Reserve
New Jersey Air National Guard
United States Navy Reserve
Short biography
Richard Bach, a pilot and aviation writer, achieved success as a new age author with the publication of Jonathan Livingston Seagull, a novel that Bach maintains was the result of two separate visionary experiences over a period of eight years. Bach's simple allegory with spiritual and philosophical overtones received little critical recognition but captured the mood of the 1970s, becoming popular with a wide range of readers, from members of the drug culture to mainstream Christian denominations. A direct descendant of Johann Sebastian Bach, Richard David Bach was born in Oak Park, Illinois, to Roland Bach, a former United States Army Chaplain, and Ruth (Shaw) Bach. While attending Long Beach State College in California, he took flying lessons, igniting his lifelong passion for aviation. From 1956-1959 he served in the United States Air Force and earned his pilot wings. In the 1960s he directed the Antique Airplane Association and also worked as a charter pilot, flight instructor, and barnstormer in the Midwest, where he offered plane rides for three dollars a person. During this period, he worked as a free-lance writer, selling articles to Flying, Soaring, Air Facts, and other magazines. He also wrote three books about flying which were Stranger to the Ground (1963), Biplane (1966), and Nothing by Chance (1969).

Since Jonathan Livingston Seagull, he has continued to share his philosophies on life, relationships, and reincarnation in six different books.

Members

Reviews

401 reviews
Jonathan Livingston Seagull is a book full of bad sentences that have been generously interpreted. It's all vague enough for people to believe that there's some sort of substantive message here, but if any other book had the phrase "Find out what you already know and you will see the way to fly!" thrown in it you would laugh that garbage right off your shelf. It is mind-boggling how serious a book about an interplanetary seagull takes itself.

The best scene in this book is without a doubt show more the seagull council meeting (every book should have a seagull council meeting). Jonathan Gull has apparently violated a law by flying in between some other seagulls (???) and so the council decided to get together and wait for him to show up on their beach. I laughed harder than I have in years at the idea of a bunch of seagulls in some dumb council checking their watches waiting for another seagull to show up, but again, I swear to you the book takes all this completely seriously. Then, when Jonathan shows up, our cartoon villain Elder Seagull banishes him to some cliffs due to his "reckless irresponsibility." If that wasn't funny enough, the Elder drops this:
"Life is the unknown and the unknowable, except that we are put into this world to eat, to stay alive as long as we possibly can."
That is the funniest shit I've ever read. Did you know this is was written for adults? Millions bought this. And if you'd like to buy it too, let me know. I got my copy for 50 cents at Goodwill, and I'm looking to recoup 100% of it.
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(fade in from commercial)

Oprah Winfrey (O): My next guest is an icon, and a source of inspiration for millions! Please welcome Mr. Jonathan Livingston Seagull!

(audience cheers … seagull flies in from offstage, loops around over the audience, and then alights on the guest chair next to Oprah)

Jonathan Livingston Seagull (JLS): Thanks for having me Oprah. It’s great to be here.

O: The pleasure’s all mine! I'm a huge fan; your message of individualism inspires me. Please tell our viewers show more about your book.

JLS: It’s all about following your own beat; not just doing what's expected. As a young bird, I looked around at my peers catching fish and finding mates. That just wasn’t my scene! So I decided to make my own rules, Man! I taught myself how to fly 190 miles per hour! You should check it out, O, it’ll blow your mind!

O: YEAH! That sounds exciting!! I can see the audience wants to talk to you, so let’s not keep them waiting...

(looks around, then points)

You, the young man in the “Pornstar” t-shirt. What’s your question?

T-shirt guy: Dude! Mr. Seagull! You are so rad! I want to be just like you! You know how you fly 190mph? Well, I drive 190mph! I lost my license, but I’m not gonna let that stop me...

JLS: Hold up! Hold on there just a sec… I’ve been through this with my lawyer and publicist so many times…

(lecturing to the whole audience)

I just want to be clear here, for the record, that I am in no way advising or recommending that anybody do anything illegal.

Now you all heard me say that… right here in front of the camera.

That’s not what I’m about.

O: But then, there are some cases, like Nelson Mandela. He followed what he knew was right, and they threw him in jail for 23 years. But in the end, he was vindicated.

JLS: (shifting uneasily in his seat) Yeah, well… I don’t want to say anything without my lawyer. Twenty-three years is a very long time.

O: Oh, I see one of our viewers has written in on Facebook! ♥♥Missy1997♥♥ writes:
”Wzup J-Unit! UR so KoOl! :-) I M a fResHmaN at NOrThsIDe HiGhsChoOL (go TiGErShaRkS!!!!!!) My ParEntz wOn’T LeT mE daTe my BoyFriEND, BuRt, b-cauZ he’z 37. We JuST GotTa fOlLoW oUr oWn DRummER!!!
PlEEZ talk 2 TheM 4 Me! ThANkZ !!! Byeeeeeeeeeee!”

JLS: (more shifting) Er… well, sometimes, Missy, your parents just know things you don’t know.. from age and perspective… and you just have to do what they say. I wouldn’t fight them on this one.

O: (slowly nodding in agreement, with a disgusted look on her face) Yeah, Missy, don’t argue with your parents.

JLS: (trying to change the subject)
There’s a sweet old seagull in the back with her wing up!
What is your question, Ma’am?

Sweet Old Seagull (SOS): (in a frail, yet determined voice)
Mr. Livingston, my son injured his wing when he followed you and your crazy cult down to Paraguay. To this day, he cannot fly straight…

JLS: (cradling head between his wings)
Ugggh!!! Again with the Jonathantown!
That was thirty-five years ago!!! When are you people gonna give this a rest???

SOS: (shaking her wing at JLS)
…one hundred twenty-seven high-speed, mid-air collisions in the first day alone… followed by weeks of starvation, because not a one of you ever bothered to learn how to catch a fish…

JLS: THEY SHUT US DOWN!!!

(with a sweep of his wing) IT’S GONE!!!...

NO MORE JONATHANTOWN!!!...

ARE YOU HAPPY???...

YOU SHOULD BE HAPPY!!!

SOS: I am concerned about young birds today reading your book…

JLS: FINE!!!

(turns to the camera)

Listen, when I tell people to break the rules and part with convention, OF COURSE it’s a given that you should do it SAFELY!! I mean… safety first, right? Let’s use our heads out there! Nobody needs to get hurt!

(throws himself back in the chair, in frustration)

Isn’t anybody out there thinking about… like, quitting college and starting a software company?? You know? Like Bill Gates? I was kinda’ thinking these questions would be more like that.

(silence)

O: (in a consoling tone) This is a mid-afternoon show. I think most people like that are probably busy at work, or in school.

JLS: (softly) Oh.

Elderly Seagull (ES) in the audience: (waving his wings up in the air) Oooh! Ooooh!!! Mr. Fancypants Author!! Pick me!!!!

JLS: (looking out into the audience): Dad? What are you doing here?

ES: I have an important question for the Bigshot rule breaker.

JLS: (quizzical look on his face) Okay… what is it?

ES: I would like you to answer, here in front of all these nice people, why it is that I have a grown fifty-three year-old son, living downstairs in the basement, eating all my fish, because he never learned to catch any.

JLS: I was developing my high-speed flying techniques! I didn’t hear you complaining when they first published my book!

ES: One book! You write one book. They give you a hundred fish. Then, for forty years...NOTHING!

JLS: Look, Pop, this was never about the fish!

ES: (gesturing towards the door) Your Mother is out there, right now as we speak, catching fish for you to eat tonight! Arthritis in both wings! She should be home, resting! Should I run out there right now and tell her?? ”You can stop now, Bernice! Johnny says ‘It’s not about the fish!’”

JLS: I don’t have to sit here and take this!
(flies off stage)

O: (starts clapping, gestures to the audience) A big hand everybody! That was Mr. Jonathan Livingston Seagull!!

(turning to the camera) You heard it here, folks! Don't conform to society's rules! Follow you heart, and make your dreams come true! ... but don't break any laws! ... and remember: safety first!

Also, kids: do what your parents say, without a lot of backtalk!

Oh, and if your heart's desire could include something marketable, like computers, that would be good.

We'll be right back after this commercial break!
(fade)
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According to this book:
1. The point of life isn't merely mundane daily survival.
2. It's actually the pursuit of absolute freedom.
3. Sufficient freedom will give you magic powers.
4. This is because reality is just a projection of thought.

According to me:
1. OK - you can impose whatever purpose you want on your life.
2. Absolute freedom isn't possible. All societies are a trade-off between mutual benefits from working collectively and giving up freedoms that are harmful to others. Becoming an show more outcast isn't a solution; you still have to complete basic survival tasks and you're excluded from any social activity - you're not completely free to do what you want at all times.
3. No, it won't.
4. Because actually, reality is reality and no amount of practice will allow you to break the rules of reality.

Even taken (as probably intended) as a fable that exagerates in order to make it's message clear, it's still an unrealistic repetition of the survivor bias fallacy that if you persevere hard enough you can acheive your dreams, whatever they may be. The psychology goes like this: You've succeeded at something. You attribute this solely to your own efforts, ignoring all other possible contributing factors (e.g. privileged background, educational opportunity, patronage, physical appearance, etc, etc). You assume that the only reason others don't succeed is because they give up. So you tell everyone to pursue their dreams and persevere, like you did, because that's guaranteed to work.

This is of course, not possible; it's not anyone's dream to be a refuse collector, but all modern societies need them far more than some guy who flies small planes for a living, as you will know if your refuse collectors have ever gone on strike. We cannot all be artists or scientists or actors or astronauts and none of us could if all of us tried to be...society would collapse and we'd all starve, instead.
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Boy: “Do not try and bend the spoon. That’s impossible. Instead…only try to realize the truth.”
Neo: “What truth?”
Boy: “There is no spoon.”

Reading Richard Bach’s 1977 personal treatise on all things humanist, [Illusions], felt like reading Neo’s training manual. But Neo didn’t really have to read anything, did he? All in all, I’d rather have just uploaded this one and not wasted the evening it took to read. The material amounted to essentially the same thing – show more nothing is real; all things are possible if you just believe they are, etc. But Neo’s journey was more palatable, less preachy.

After writing [Jonathon Livingston Seagull], Bach literally checked out, vowing not to write any further. While spending summers flying the country in an antique biplane, he became enamored with the idea of a messiah figure who had decided to quit and turn his back on the calling. The idea became this book, featuring two barnstormers who meet in a Midwest field and strike up a friendship. One of the two men is the reluctant messiah, and he begins teaching the other how to see the truth of the world. The bulk of the narrative is told in the conversations between the two. Throughout, there are excerpts from “The Messiah’s Handbook,” which magically tells you exactly what you need to know at any time. Here’s a sampling:
“Your only obligation in any lifetime is to be true to yourself. Being true to anyone else or anything else is not only impossible, but the mark of a fake messiah.”
“Learning is finding out what you already know. Doing is demonstrating that you know it.”
“You are never given a wish without also being given the power to make it true. You may have to work for it, however.”

As with any philosophy or religion, there are some valuable lessons if you look for them. Humanistic philosophy is important in demonstrating the inherent value in human life. But taken to its extreme here – everything is secondary to self-pleasing – it dissembles. Like most humanist platforms, [Illusions] takes several shots at any religion or thought that might send people on a journey outside of themselves. Odd that so many broadly accepting philosophies are rabid to exclude opposing thoughts. At several spots in the book, the messiah makes clear that the only important thing in the world is to do what feels good. But when challenged, the messiah also says that you can’t be fully self-realized if you find pleasure in pleasing or serving others. There’s the faulty logic. The difficulty of [Illusions]’ premise is that following it would create a self-obsessed world – Bach would be okay with that, apparently.
Bottom Line: Mainly a humanist philosophy platform.

3 bones!!!!!
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Associated Authors

Russell Munson Photographer, Illustrator
Kaija Kauppi Translator
Tom Bean Cover designer
Joan Stoliar Designer
Ron Wegen Illustrator
K. O. Eckland Illustrator

Statistics

Works
58
Also by
3
Members
25,041
Popularity
#841
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
402
ISBNs
682
Languages
32
Favorited
64

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