Phil Cousineau was born in an army hospital in Columbia, South Carolina. He has worked as a sportswriter and taught screenwriting at the American Film Institute (AFI). American mythologist Joseph Campbell was a mentor and major influence; Cousineau wrote the documentary film and companion book about Campbell's life, The Hero's Journey. The author of more than 25 nonfiction books, Cousineau has more than 15 documentary screenwriting credits to his name, including the 1991 Academy Award-nominated Forever Activists.
Seminal works include, Soul: An Archaeology, Readings from Socrates to Ray Charles, which Los Angeles Times columnist Jonathan Kirsch reviewed as "Inspiring, often mind-blowing, sometimes even a little scary," and the best-selling book, The Art of Pilgrimage: The Seeker's Guide the Making Travel Sacred, described in the Austin American-Statesman as "If Joseph Campbell, the Dalai Lama and Bill Moyers were to have collaborated on a book about journeys...I suspect it would look very much like The Art of Pilgrimage." Cousineau worked with religion scholar Huston Smith on two books as well as four documentary films on contemporary Native American issues. His books have been translated into nine languages. According to the San Francisco Chronicle, "Phil Cousineau has long been a powerful presence in the [San Francisco] Bay Area literary scene, but he is best known as a filmmaker and...writer who has carried on and reinterpreted the work of Joseph Campbell, especially regarding the omnipresent influence of myth in modern life."
Cousineau grew up just outside of Detroit, once known as "the Paris of the Midwest,” with French Canadian roots. While moonlighting in a steel factory he studied journalism at the University of Detroit. Before turning to writing books and films full-time, Cousineau’s peripatetic career also included playing semi-professional basketball in Europe, harvesting date trees on an Israeli kibbutz, painting 44 Victorian houses (also known as Painted Ladies in San Francisco), teaching, and leading art and literary tours to Europe.
An expert on mythology and film and the monomyth "hero journey" structure of screenplays, Cousineau consults on writing projects of all kinds. He lectures frequently on themes of sacred travel, sports, writing, and creativity and is currently the host of the Link TV television series, Global Spirit, interviewing guests such as Robert Thurman, Karen Armstrong, Andrew Harvey, Deepak Chopra, and Joanne Shenandoah. Broadcast journalist Bill Moyers has commented that “The discussions on Link TV’s Global Spirit series are sorely needed in this dispirited and disenchanted world. In many ways it is more important than journalism today.”
Cousineau lives in North Beach, San Francisco, California and is currently writing different books on language, atonement, and beauty.
On Creativity:"Inspiration comes and goes, creativity is the result of practice." ~from Stoking the Creative Fires: 9 Ways to Rekindle Passion and Imagination
On Travel and Pilgrimage:"Now is the time to lead your ideal life." ~from The Art of Pilgrimage: The Seeker's Guide to Making Travel Sacred
"The practice of soulful travel is to discover the overlapping point between history and everyday life, the way to find the essence of every place, every day: in the markets, small chapels, out-of-the-way parks, craft shops. Curiosity about the extraordinary in the ordinary moves the heart of the traveler intent on seeing behind the veil of tourism."
"In each of us dwells a pilgrim. It is the part of us that longs to have direct contact with the sacred."
"The pilgrim is a poetic traveler, one who believes that there is poetry on the road, at the heart of everything."
"Are you alive now at home? Are you going to stay in your coffin of mediocrity, [or] break out of your cage, and take a journey to discover this in order to find yourself?"
"What every traveler confronts sooner or later is that the way we spend each day of our travel...is the way we spend our lives."
"Have you ever made a vow to go someplace that is sacred to you, your family, your group? Have you ever imagined yourself in a place that stirred your soul like the song of doves at dawn? If not you, then who? If not now, when? If not here, where?"
"Mapping out dozens of deeply focused trips around the world has convinced me that preparation no more spoils the chance for spontaneity and serendipity than discipline ruins the opportunity for genuine self-expression in sports, acting, or the tea ceremony."
"The force behind myths, fairytales, parables and soulful travel stories reveals the myriad ways the sacred breaks through the resistance and shines forth into our world. Pilgrimage holds out the promise of personal contact with that sacred force."
"The art of movement, the poetry of motion, the music of personal experience, of the sacred in those places it has been known to shine forth. If we are not astounded by these possibilities, we can never plumb the depths of our own souls or the soul of the world.”
"What is sacred is what is worthy of our reverence, what evokes awe and wonder in the human heart, and what, when contemplated, transforms us utterly."
"Uncover what you long for and you will discover who you are."
"Our task in life is to find our deep soul work and throw ourselves headlong into it."
On Synchronicity:"[Synchronicity is] an inexplicable but profoundly meaningful coincidence that stirs the soul and offers a glimpse of one's destiny."~from Coincidence Or Destiny?: Stories of Synchronicity That Illuminate Our Lives
On the Soul:"As the ancients said, the soul is realized in love."
On the Hero's Journey:"The journey of the hero is about the courage to seek the depths; the image of creative rebirth; the eternal cycle of change within us; the uncanny discovery that the seeker is the mystery which the seeker seeks to know. The hero journey is a symbol that binds, in the original sense of the word, two distant ideas, the spiritual quest of the ancients with the modern search for identity, “always the one, shape-shifting yet marvelously constant story that we find."
A Seat at the Table: Huston Smith in Conversation with Native Americans on Religious Freedom (2005)
The Blue Museum (2005)
The Olympic Odyssey: Rekindling the True Spirit of the Great Games (2003)
The Way Things Are: Conversations with Huston Smith on the Spiritual Life (2002)
The Book of Roads: Travel Stories (2001)
Once and Future Myths: The Power of Ancient Stories in Modern Time (2001) Foreword by Stephen Larsen
Coincidence Or Destiny?: Stories of Synchronicity That Illuminate Our Lives Foreword by Robert A. Johnson
The Soul Aflame: A Modern Book of Hours (2000)
Soul: An Archaeology: From Socrates to Ray Charles (1993)
The Soul of the World: A Modern Book of Hours (1993) Photography by Eric Lawton
Joseph Campbell on His Life and Work Edited and with an Introduction by Phil Cousineau. Foreword by Stuart L. Brown, Executive Editor. San Francisco: Harper and Row (1990)
A Seat at the Table: Struggling for American Religious Freedom A Kifaru Production.
The Peyote Road: Ancient Religion in Contemporary Crisis A Kifaru Production. Narrated by Peter Coyote.
The Red Road to Sobriety A Kifaru Production. Narrated by Benjamin Bratt
Your Humble Serpent: The Life of Reuben Snake A Kifaru Production.
Ecological Design: Inventing the Future A Knossos Project. Narrated by Linda Hunt
Wayfinders: A Pacific Odyssey Directed by Gail Evenari. Narrated by Napuanalani Cassidy and Patrick Stewart
Wiping the Tears of Seven Generations A Kifaru Production. Narrated by Hanna Left Hand Bull Fixico.
The Presence of the Goddess A film by Christy Baldwin. Narrated by Isabel Allende (1993)
Forever Activists: Stories from the Abraham Lincoln Brigade A film by Connie Field and Judith Montell. Narrated by Ronnie Gilbert, nominated for an Academy Award Best Documentary, Features. (1990).
The World of Joseph Campbell Narrated by Peter Donat (1987)