Daoist Monk Yunrou (formerly Arthur Rosenfeld) received his academic background at Yale, Cornell, and the University of California. In 2012 he was ordained a Daoist monk at the Chun Yang (Pure Yang) Daoist Temple in Guangzhou, China, one of the first Westerners to be so honored. Yunrou believes in the beauty and power of story and in the importance of compassion. Blending literature, biology, and medicine with an orthodox Daoist education, his writings and teachings propagate Daoist ideas and focus on environmental conservation, and political and social justice. He may well be the next Alan Watts. 14 of Yunrou's books have been published to critical acclaim, some achieving bestseller status and garnering Hollywood options. He has received numerous prizes and notices for his work, including being recognized as a finalist for the prestigious Books for a Better Life award for his bestseller The Truth About Chronic Pain (New York: Basic Books, 2003). He authored. His most recent works are Tai Chi - The Perfect Exercise (Da Capo Press, June 2013) and YIN--A Love Story, which was simultaneously released in the US and China in English and in Mandarin Chinese. YANG, a new novel of Chinese history, is being developed for film by Chinese film giant WanDa. His other fiction and non-fiction titles include The Truth About Chronic Pain (approximately 70,000 copies sold in hardcover), National-Book-Award nominee A Cure for Gravity, and popular crime novels. Yunrou blogs at www.monkyunrou.com and on The Huffington Post. His offerings also appear in Vogue, Vanity Fair, Parade, Newsweek, Ebony, The Wall Street Journal, WebMD, Fox Business News, and numerous other websites and newspapers. Mad Monk Manifesto builds on his previous work but is broader in appeal. From 2010 - 2013, he hosted the hit (60MM households) national public television show Longevity Tai Chi with Arthur Rosenfeld. In 2010, he produced and hosted a documentary series on the scientific evidence for acupuncture, tai chi, and meditation. Tens of thousands of copies of these films have been distributed to major medical centers, professional healthcare organizations, group medical practices, patient advocacy associations, and more. In 2012 he produced a follow-up instructional series. The American Heart Association profiled Yunrou as an inspirational resource in 2016, and he has contributed to the tai chi program for the United States Department of Veteran's affairs. In 2011 he was named Tai Chi Master of The Year at the World Congress on Qigong and Traditional Chinese Medicine, and in 2014 he opened and closed the International Tai Chi Symposium in Louisville, Kentucky and was the sole westerner on the dais with the five Chinese tai chi family patriarchs. Yunrou lives in South Florida and teaches around the world.