Bryant, Edwin F. The Yoga Sūtras of Patañjali: A New Edition, Translation, and Commentary. New York, NY: North Point Press, 2009.
Compiled by the sage Patañjali somewhere around the turn of the Common Era, the Yoga Sūtras is one of the canonical texts of classical Eastern thought and came to represent one of the six schools of Indian philosophy. The text consists of 195 short aphorisms organized into four chapters. Centered mainly around meditative absorption, it presents the eight-fold path of aṣṭāṅga yoga to serve as a guide to reaching direct experience and realization of the puruṣa, the innermost self, or what might be thought of as the soul.
Desai, Sharmila, and Anna Wise. Yoga Sadhana for Mothers: Shared experiences of Ashtanga yoga, pregnancy, birth and motherhood. London, UK: Yogawords, Limited, 2014.
This in-depth book by two long-term practitioners and teachers, Sharmila Desai and Anna Wise, offers guidance for practitioners of ashtanga yoga through pregnancy, childbirth, postpartum recovery, and motherhood. The book includes anatomical resources and suggestions for practice, developed in collaboration with Sharath Jois, along with photographs and diagrams. It also contains interviews with over 30 women steeped in this practice about their journey through conception, pregnancy, birth, and motherhood.
Freeman, Richard, and Mary Taylor. The Art of Vinyasa: Awakening Body and Mind through the Practice of Ashtanga Yoga. Boulder, CO: Shambhala Publications, 2016.
This book by senior teachers Richard Freeman and Mary Taylor is a guide to yoga as a moving meditation on the subtle, internal forms of the practice, particularly through an understanding of vinyāsa. The section on āsana, rather than being organized based on the ashtanga sequence, is arranged according to forms: forward bends, backbends, twists, balancing postures, etc.
Freeman, Richard. The Mirror of Yoga: Awakening the Intelligence of Body and Mind. Boston, MA: Shambhala Publications, 2010.
Richard Freeman’s book is a consideration of the philosophy underlying the ashtanga yoga practice, including through discussion of a number of texts and philosophies, such as Sāṃkhya, the Upaniṣads, and the Yoga Sūtras. He discusses the eight limbs of yoga, different approaches to and schools of yoga, and practices such as chanting and meditation
Hendry, Hamish. Yoga Dharma. London, UK: Pushpam, 2016.
Senior teacher Hamish Hendry of Ashtanga Yoga London wrote this small handbook to offer insight beyond the physical practice of yoga into its underlying philosophy, essential texts, and Hindu mythology and stories.
Hunt, Taylor. A Way from Darkness: My Story of Addiction, Recovery, and Yoga. Ekam Publishing, 2016.
Hunt of Ashtanga Yoga Columbus wrote this memoir about his struggle with addiction and his path to ashtanga yoga.
Niranjanananda Saraswati. Samkhya Darshan. Samkhya Darshan: Yogic Perspective on Theories of Realism. Munger, Bihar, India: Yoga Publications Trust, 2008.
Sāṁkhya is one of the earliest schools of Indian philosophy and presents a dualistic view of reality, consisting of the puruṣa, or witnessing consciousness, and prakṛti, the root cause of creation. Sāṁkhya philosophy is essential as a foundation for understanding yoga (and is also a basis for Buddhist philosophy); it can be considered the underlying metaphysics of self-realization, with yoga being the method for attaining it. The Sāṁkhya Kārikā was written by a third-generation disciple, Īśvara Kṛṣṇa, and describes the entire philosophy, as taught by the sage Kapila, in 72 ślokas, or verses.
Jois, Pattabhi. Yoga Mala: The Original Teachings of Ashtanga Yoga Master Sri K. Pattabhi Jois. New York, NY: North Point Press, 2002.
Originally published in the Kannada language in 1962, this is K. Pattabhi Jois’s brief guide to ashtanga yoga. In this book, he explains some of the philosophy behind ashtanga yoga, explaining key terms and principles and citing a number of foundational yoga texts and scriptures. He outlines the first four limbs of yoga according to Patañjali’s Yoga Sūtras, and then goes through the primary series of ashtanga yoga, explaining each posture, the method for entering and exiting it (vinyāsa), and some of the benefits it provides, accompanied by a photo of himself or Sharath demonstrating the posture. The book features forewords by Sharath and senior teacher Eddie Stern.
Jois, Sharath. Aṣṭāṅga Yoga Anuṣṭāna. Mysore, India: KPJAYI Mysore, 2013.
Written by Sharath Jois and published by KPJAYI in Mysore, this book provides a brief introduction to ashtanga yoga and the precise, “official” vinyāsa count for each of the postures in the primary series, along with photos of Sharath demonstrating each posture.
Jois, Sharath, and Isha Singh Sawhney. Ageless: A Yogi's Secrets to a Long and Healthy Life. New Delhi, India: Juggernaut Books, 2018.
In this book, Jois offers advice, through the lens of yoga principles and philosophy, on how to live a long and healthy life. He provides dietary and lifestyle recommendations, as well as a few āsana sequences.
Desikachar, T. K. V.., E. R. Ramaswamy Iyengar, Kausthub Desikachar, and Tirumalai Krishnamacharya. Yoga Makaranda: The Nectar of Yoga. Chennai, India: Media Garuda, Krishnamacharya Healing & Yoga Foundation, 2011.
First published in the Kannada language in 1934, this is Krishnamacharya’s first book on yoga and one of the first to present yoga to a general population as a “householder’s practice.” This was one of the first books to present the practice of āsanas in a sequential manner (vinyāsa krama). It includes information about complementary health and lifestyle practices and photos of Krishnamacharya and some of his students demonstrating the postures.
MacGregor, Kino. The Power of Ashtanga Yoga: Developing a Practice That Will Bring You Strength, Flexibility, and Inner Peace. Boston, MA: Shambhala Publications, 2013.
This textbook by senior teacher Kino MacGregor provides a view of the ashtanga yoga practice as a path of spiritual transformation and personal development. It also contains a guide to the full ashtanga primary series, with photographs and descriptions of each posture.
MacGregor, Kino. The Power of Ashtanga Yoga II: A Practice to Open Your Heart and Purify Your Body and Mind. Boston, MA: Shambhala Publications, 2015.
Senior teacher Kino MacGregor’s follow-up to her primary series book provides information on the ashtanga intermediate series, including philosophical background. She demonstrates the full series in a pose-by-pose guide.
Maehle, Gregor. Ashtanga Yoga: Practice and Philosophy. Novato, CA, New World Library, 2007.
This textbook by Gregor Maehle provides an overview of ashtanga yoga, covering its history and lineage; the fundamentals of breath, bandha, and dṛṣṭi; a rendering of the complete Yoga Sūtras of Patañjali; and a breakdown of each posture of the ashtanga primary series. It includes detailed photographs, descriptions, and anatomical information.
Maehle, Gregor. Ashtanga Yoga: The Intermediate Series: Mythology, Anatomy, and Practice. Novato, CA: New World Library, 2009.
Similar to the author’s primary series book, this book covers the āsanas of the ashtanga intermediate series and includes further background on the practice’s philosophical and mythological heritage and the Sanskrit language.
Stern, Eddie. One Simple Thing: A New Look at the Science of Yoga and How It Can Transform Your Life. New York, NY: North Point Press, 2019.
In this book, senior teacher Eddie Stern explores the effects of yoga on the human nervous system from the perspective of modern neuroscience and ancient principles and through a variety of practices, including breathing, chanting, postures, and meditation. It provides a scientific and practical understanding of how our bodies and minds work. Deepak Chopra writes the foreword.
Muktibodhananda, Swami. Hatha Yoga Pradipika. Bihar, India: Bihar School of Yoga, 1998.
This fifteenth-century Sanskrit manual written by Svātmārāma presents the practice of yoga as a balance of mind, body, and energy through the performance of āsanas and other physical techniques, including dietary habits, cleansing practices (kriyās), breathing, and unblocking the flow of prāṇa through the physical and subtle energetic body.
Patton, Laurie L. The Bhagavad Gita. New York, NY: Penguin Classics, 2008.
Composed in the first or second century CE and considered one of the foundational yoga texts, the Gītā is an episode of the Sanskrit epic poem the Mahābharata. It recounts the conversation between the warrior Arjuna and his charioteer, Kṛṣṇa (an incarnation of the god Viṣṇu), on the brink of a major battle. Their conversation unfolds into an exposition on philosophy, morality, duty, and yoga as a path to self-realization.