The Invisible Sun: A Guide for the Soul from Rumi's Master
By (Author) Attar
By (author) Sholeh Wolpe
HarperCollins Publishers Inc
HarperOne
1st December 2025
United States
General
Non Fiction
Poetry
Classic and pre-20th century poetry
Narrative theme: Love and relationships
Narrative theme: Environmental issues / the natural world
Islamic groups: Sunni, Alsalaf
The Koran (Quran)
Aspects of religion
Spirituality and religious experience
Personal religious testimony and popular inspirational works
Hardback
240
Width 135mm, Height 203mm, Spine 20mm
454g
The first comprehensive English collection from one of the worlds most influential mysticsAttarthe twelfth-century poet Rumi called his master.
Twelfth-century Persian poet Attar (11451221) was revered by Rumi and though his work is beloved around the world, he is mostly unknown to English readers. Translated in simple, elegant language by award-winning poet Sholeh Wolpone among generations of poets influenced by Attar's poetryTheInvisible Sunis a beautiful treasury of Attars most prescient poetry, offering comfort and inspiration.
Attar was one of the most important mystic Sufi poets in the East, comparable in stature and influence to John Milton in the West. In Western thought there is a sharp separation between day-to-day human experience and the transcendence of religion and spirituality. But Sufi philosophy teaches that while the soul awaits its release from the confines of the body, it can experience the other world through mystic union achieved by an inward journey to purify the self.
The Invisible Sunwidely introduces the work of Attarthe master Rumi called the spirit and himself its shadowto English-speaking readers as never before. Profound yet exquisite in its simplicity, bringing comfort and wisdom, Attars poetry continues to resonate today:
Everything, large and small, honors your existence,
dont look at yourself with contempt.
There is nothing greater than you.
Attar(also known as Shaikh Farid-Ud-Din, Attar of Nishapur) was born 1145 in Nishsapur, a city in the northeast region of Iran.His name Attar means herbalist and perfume maker and he practiced the profession of pharmacist. Although information about his life and death is opaque and has been mythologized over the intervening centuries, at some point Attar traveled widely and met with many Sufi Masters. Rumi called him the spirit and himself its shadow and wrote: Attar traveled through al the seven cities love/ While I am only at the bend of the first Alley.Attar lived for over seventy years and died a violent death in the massacre inflicted by the Mongols in 1221. Sholeh Wolp is an Iranian-born poet, playwright, and librettist. Her literary work includes seven collections of poetry, several plays, five books of translations and three anthologies, as well astexts and librettos for the choir and opera.Her performances, solo or in collaboration with musicians and artists, have been hailed by audiences as mesmerizing. She has lived in Iran, Trinidad, and United Kingdom and presently divides her time between California and Barcelona.