Ajaan Chah [info icon]

Note: An extensive collection of books and transcribed talks by Ajaan Chah is available from Abhayagiri Monastery.

Bodhinyana: A Collection of Dhamma Talks, by The Venerable Ajahn Chah, (Phra Bodhinyana Thera) (1997; 68pp./204KB)
Nine talks on meditation practice — some delivered to lay followers, some to monks.
Food for the Heart, by Venerable Ajahn Chah (1994; 95pp./286KB)
These ten talks were given to bhikkhus at Ajaan Chah's monastery in Thailand and contain a wealth of insight and humor into all aspects of Dhamma practice. Much of this material is probably more accessible to long-term students, rather than to newcomers to meditation.
In Body and Mind, by Ajahn Chah, translated from the Thai by Thanissaro Bhikkhu (2012; 34pp./284KB)
A Dhamma talk given on August 23, 1978.

[book icon] Included in the book Still Flowing Water

A Gift of Dhamma, by Ajahn Chah, translated from the Thai by Thanissaro Bhikkhu (2013; 34pp./114KB)
A public talk given on October 10, 1977, addressed to the parents of a monk who had come from France to visit their son. An edited version of this talk has been translated into English under the same name. This is a translation of a new, full transcript of the original talk.

[book icon] Included in the book Still Flowing Water

In Simple Terms: 108 Dhamma Similes, by Ajahn Chah, translated from the Thai by Thanissaro Bhikkhu (2011; 33pp./100KB)
Ajahn Chah was a master at using the apt and unusual simile to explain points of Dhamma. The translations of these similes have been polished as little as possible, for their unpolished nature is precisely what reveals unexpected layers of meaning. This book is a companion to It’s Like This.
It’s Like This: 108 Dhamma Similes, by Ajahn Chah, translated from the Thai by Thanissaro Bhikkhu (2011; 33pp./100KB)
Ajahn Chah was a master at using the apt and unusual simile to explain points of Dhamma. He was especially talented at exploiting the open-ended nature of the simile - using a particular image to make one point in one context, and a very different point in another. This book is a companion to In Simple Terms.
Living Dhamma, by Venerable Ajahn Chah, translated from the Thai by The Sangha, Wat Pah Nanachat (1994; 75pp./225KB)
Nine talks by Ajaan Chah. Highlights: the classic "Our Real Home" and "Tuccho Pothila (Venerable Empty-Scripture)," a humorous and penetrating reminder that the real practice of Dhamma lies within.
Not for Sure: Two Dhamma Talks, by Ajahn Chah, translated from the Thai by Thanissaro Bhikkhu (2010; 21pp./51KB) [PDF icon]
We suffer as a result of clinging to what is fundamentally inconstant (anicca). So don't fall for what you like; don't fall for what you dislike. Learn to punch your likes and dislikes before they punch you!
Our Real Home: A Talk to an Aging Lay Disciple Approaching Death, by Ajaan Chah, translated from the Thai by The Sangha at Wat Pah Nanachat (1994; 10pp./30KB)
See description immediately below.
Our Real Home, by Ajaan Chah, translated from the Thai by Thanissaro Bhikkhu (2011; 12pp./35KB)
This is a talk that Ajahn Chah recorded at the request of one of his students whose mother was on her deathbed. The student had expected just a short message for his mother, but instead Ajahn Chah gave this extended talk of consolation and encouragement for the mother and the whole family.

[book icon] Included in the book Still Flowing Water

In the Shape of a Circle, by Venerable Ajahn Chah, translated from the Thai by Thanissaro Bhikkhu (Geoffrey DeGraff) (2011; 18pp./55KB)
A talk given to a visiting monk who was getting discouraged in his practice.

[book icon] Included in the book Still Flowing Water

Still Flowing Water: Eight Dhamma Talks, by Ajahn Chah, translated from the Thai by Thanissaro Bhikkhu (2011; 33pp./100KB)
A collection of eight new or significantly revised translations of Ajahn Chah’s Dhamma talks by Ṭhānissaro Bhikkhu. Two of them have never been translated before into English, and four of them are based on entirely new Thai transcriptions of the best and most complete source recordings available.
A Taste of Freedom, by Ajahn Chah (1994; 50pp./149KB)
A collection of ten talks delivered by Ajaan Chah in Thailand and England. These talks, given in Ajaan Chah's uniquely humorous and incisive conversational tone, span a range of Dhamma topics, from the cultivation of a balanced mind in meditation practice, to the overcoming of habitual ways of perceiving the world that obstruct the arising of liberating insight.
The Teachings of Ajahn Chah: A Collection of Ajahn Chah's Translated Dhamma Talks, by Ajahn Chah (2007; 725pp./3.6MB) [PDF icon]
A comprehensive anthology of Ajaan Chah's Dhamma talks, translated into English. The talks include all those that have been previously published in the following books: Bodhinyana (1982), A Taste of Freedom (fifth impression, 2002), Living Dhamma (1992), Food for the Heart (1992), The Path to Peace (1996), Clarity of Insight (2000), Unshakeable Peace (2003), and Everything is Teaching Us (2004). [This book is available only as a PDF document.] [Not available in HTML]