I suggest - Hock, H. H. (2006) An Early Upanishadic Reader: With Notes, Glossary, and an Appendix of Related Vedic Texts. Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass Publishers.
perhaps combined with - Cohen, S., ed. (2017) The Upanisads. A Complete Guide. Abingdon: Taylor & Francis Ltd. DW On Thu, 20 Apr 2023 at 12:02, Gleb Sharygin via INDOLOGY < [email protected]> wrote: > Dear colleagues, > > A student of mine asks whether there exists a user-friendly reader with > literal (interlinear) word-to-word > translations, which engages the texts of the early Upaniṣads in the way > the new Pāli reader of Bhikkhu Bodhi > (2020) engages the Pāli texts. > > I was able to suggest only the ISKCON version of the *Īśopaniṣad* and *An > Early Upaniṣadic Reader* (2007) by > Hans Heinrich Hock (the latter publication is very close to what my > student expects, but it places the glossary (or > vocabulary) at the end of the book, making it harder for a beginner to > use, and the translations are not literal). > > Are there other similar readers? > > -- > > With kind regards (mettāya), > > Gleb Sharygin, Dr. des. > > > "Evaṃ vimuttacitto kho, aggivessana, bhikkhu na kenaci saṃvadati, na > > kenaci vivadati, yañca loke vuttaṃ tena voharati, aparāmasa"nti. > > > > _______________________________________________ > INDOLOGY mailing list > [email protected] > https://list.indology.info/mailman/listinfo/indology >
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