Search

Recent Posts
The Girl Who Kicked The Hornets Nest Combo TV Spot
Watch The Spy Next Door Free
Cats Dogs The Revenge Of Kitty Galore
LEGEND OF THE GUARDIANS THE OWLS OF GAHOOLE NEW TRAILER HD
Toothless
Solange Dancingin The Dark
Call Of Duty Black Ops Review Skyline Movie
The Dragon With The Girl Tattoo By Adam Roberts

Other Blogs
Movie Coast
Movie Probe
The Movie Store

Tags
127 Hours
A Nightmare On Elm Street
Alice In Wonderland
Alpha And Omega
Avatar: Special Edition
Babies
Brooklyn's Finest
Burlesque
Case 39
Catfish
Cats & Dogs: The Revenge Of Kitty Galore
Charlie St. Cloud
Chloe
City Island
Clash Of The Titans
Conviction
Cop Out
Cyrus
Date Night
Daybreakers
Dear John
Death At A Funeral
Despicable Me
Devil
Diary Of A Wimpy Kid
Dinner For Schmucks
Due Date
Easy A
Eat Pray Love
Edge Of Darkness
Exit Through The Gift Shop
Extraordinary Measures
Fair Game
Faster
For Colored Girls
From Paris With Love
Furry Vengeance
Get Him To The Greek
Get Low
Going The Distance
Green Zone
Greenberg
Grown Ups
Harry Potter And The Deathly Hallows Part 1
Hereafter
Hot Tub Time Machine
How To Train Your Dragon
Hubble 3D
I Am Love
Inception
Inside Job
Iron Man 2
It's Kind Of A Funny Story
Jackass 3-D
Joan Rivers: A Piece Of Work
Jonah Hex
Just Wright
Kick-Ass
Killers
Knight & Day
Leap Year
Legend Of The Guardians: The Owls Of Ga'Hoole
Legion
Let Me In
Letters To God
Letters To Juliet
Life As We Know It
Lottery Ticket
Love And Other Drugs
MacGruber
Machete
Mao's Last Dancer
Marmaduke
Megamind
Morning Glory
My Name Is Khan
My Soul To Take
Nanny McPhee Returns
Oceans
Our Family Wedding
Paranormal Activity 2
Percy Jackson & The Olympians: The Lightning Thief
Piranha 3D
Please Give
Predators
Prince Of Persia: The Sands Of Time
Ramona And Beezus
Red
Remember Me
Repo Men
Resident Evil: Afterlife
Robin Hood
Salt
Saw 3D
Scott Pilgrim Vs. The World
Secretariat
Sex And The City 2
She's Out Of My League
Shrek Forever After
Shutter Island
Skyline
Solitary Man
Splice
Step Up 3-D
Takers
Tangled
The A-Team
The American
The Back-Up Plan
The Book Of Eli
The Bounty Hunter
The Crazies
The Expendables
The Ghost Writer
The Girl Who Kicked The Hornet's Nest
The Girl Who Played With Fire
The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo
The Karate Kid
The Kids Are All Right
The Last Airbender
The Last Exorcism
The Last Song
The Last Station
The Losers
The Next Three Days
The Other Guys
The Runaways
The Secret In Their Eyes
The Social Network
The Sorcerer's Apprentice
The Spy Next Door
The Switch
The Town
The Twilight Saga: Eclipse
The Warrior's Way
The Wolfman
To Save A Life
Tooth Fairy
Toy Story 3
Tyler Perry's Why Did I Get Married Too?
Unstoppable
Valentine's Day
Vampires Suck
Waiting For Superman
Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps
When In Rome
Winter's Bone
You Again
You Will Meet A Tall Dark Stranger
Youth In Revolt
Marketplace

Eat Pray Love One Womans Search For Everything Across Italy India And Indonesia

Eat Pray Love One Womans Search For Everything Across Italy India And IndonesiaThis Beautifully Written, heartfelt memoir Touched A Nerve Among Both readers and reviewers. Elizabeth Gilbert tells how she made The Difficult choice to leave behind All the trappings of modern American success (marriage, house in the Country, career) and find, INSTEAD, What She Truly wanted from life. Setting out for a year to study different aspects of Her Three nature Hamid Three different cultures, Gilbert Explored the art of pleasure in Italy and the art of devotion in India, And Then a Balance Between the Two On The Indonesian island of Bali. By turns rapturous and rueful, this wise and funny author (Whom Booklist calls "Anne Lamott's hip, yoga-Practicing, footloose Younger Sister") IS Poised to garner yet more Adoring fans.
Posted on March 8, 2011.
Posted In: Eat Pray Love
Share |

Comments

Edelmira Thurmond says...
Not one interesting character. Not even the author. A horrible divorce... big deal. A love of food ... not really worth 116 pages. I had to get to page 156 to finally understand. She is in an Ashram in India having trouble silencing her mind and meditating.



"What I am alarmed to find in meditation is that my mind is actually not that interesting a place after all."



That sentence sums up the book
Posted on March 8, 2011
Marilynn Hedglin says...
I'm a big fan of Gilbert's earlier work (specifically 2003's The Last American Man) and I was deeply disappointed by this book. In fact, I sent it sailing across the room twice within the first hour. Gilbert's a fine writer, let there be no doubt. Her structure is great. She writes scrumptious sentences. She's an eminently likable narrator. But my complaint is more psychological rather than literary. As we learn over the course of the book, Ms. Gilbert is an enormously privileged woman, lives the glamorous writing life in NYC, owns two homes and yet is so sad and depressed about life. Get over yourself, lady! This book is the literary equivalent of like How Stella Got Her Grove Back. Only with yoga and white people.



Gilbert claims to be quite the globe-trotter but seems to have never learned the basic tenet of travel: learning about the larger world. Confronted with the rich, confounding, complicated world, she turns away and gets lost in her own navel.



What I hate even more about this book is what its incredible popularity says about us as Americans: just like Gilbert, we are giant narcissists and we never, ever stop thinking about ourselves and our own needs and cannot, even for a second, think about the lives of the less fortunate around the world. Gilbert thus becomes the American Every-Woman: 9-11 happens in her own backyard and she's so distraught over her failed marriage that it barely registers. If you think I'm being too hard on us Americans, think of it this way: her previous book The Last American Man was much, much better than Eat, Pray, Love but since it evinced none of the yoga-loving-upper-middle-class-woman-who-spouts-cheap-wisdom-like-Oprah-on-a-global-quest-for-self-actualization story elements, it barely sold 1% of what Eat, Pray, Love did. This is a sadly-revealing book about the state of our culture. And it's not just about Elizabeth Gilbert. It's all about us.



And, of course, don't miss the upcoming film adaptation, starring-you guessed it- Julia Roberts. If I have one other person recommend this book to me I'm going to to kill them.
Posted on March 8, 2011
Lorenzo Guttery says...
I've read several of the reviews posted here and though I couldn't finish this book, it seems to me that what's wrong with it is not so much the author's hollow-souled narcissism but her lack of intellectual seriousness. Someone gave me this book as a birthday present. That it has received a lot of attention is no surprise.Look at the drivel America reads.Light, shallow laughs, sex, food, not much real thought.That's the sum of this book.Feel-good rubbish that inspires not one iota of serious thought.Gilbert's slapphappy universe is one in which everything can be solved with pizza and fresh mozarella.Every paragraph contains at least one stock one-liner.This isn't literature.It's stand-up comedy of the worst kind.We've read it all before.She claims she can make friends with anyone.It's precisely that lack of discernment and depth that makes this story forgettable.The prose is laced with one cliche, one trite and cutesy obvservation after another. Some reviewer here said this book is not a book but a magazine article.Exactly right. I finally closed the book when I read that while in India she wanted to "valet park" a destitue family into a new life.It isn't just that the phrase is a silly toss-off modernism but thatthere's no true emotion in it.You'll never know how this woman really feels.Don't waste your money on it.
Posted on March 8, 2011
Kristi Blad says...
Elizabeth Gilbert was a self-absorbed, married, thirty-something living the privileged existence of an affluent writer in the most powerful nation on Earth, when, suddenly - shock-horror - she realized that she wasn't happy. As a consequence, she cast aside her husband, took up with another man - with whom she still wasn't happy - and, after this relationship fell into inevitable dissolution, decided to run off around the world in order to "find herself" (one must assume that she'd already looked down the back of the sofa) after receiving a handsome advance from a publishing company to chronicle her subsequent exploits.



"Eat, Pray, Love" is pseudo-intellectual, altruistic, mother-my-dog pap of the worst kind masquerading as spiritual insight. Read between the lines and it expounds selfishness as a virtue and mindless hedonism as both philosophy and legitimate path to spiritual insight. Unsurprisingly, that great doyen of the gullible, Oprah Winfrey, loved it and made it one of her book club choices, thus unleashing it to a wider audience than Gilbert's talents as a writer would normally have ever allowed. Apparently, God help us, a big-screen version with Brad Pitt and Julia Roberts is currently in the offing.



As a literary construct, Gilbert herself seems to be the contemporary living embodiment of Tom and Daisy Buchanan from "The Great Gatsby", of whom F. Scott Fitzgerald wrote, "They were careless people...they smashed up things and creatures and then retreated back into their money or their vast carelessness...and let other people clean up the mess they had made."



"Self-absorbed" does not begin to cover it; "self-centred" is not nearly an adequate description. One hopes that she can't really have been so completely inured to the poverty of India and Indonesia by her solipsism. If so, then she seems to be genuinely emblematic of a subset of the "sex and the city" generation of women who put their own self-gratification above all other things. Worryingly, this attitude seems to be becoming increasingly more prevalent in western society.



I will be honest, I first happened upon this book after briefly seeing some of Winfrey's interview with Gilbert on television and consequently read three quarters of the book in my local library - and was so completely incensed that I felt it my civic duty to warn you off of this book.



If you want a genuinely enjoyable book to provoke introspection, this isn't it, but may I politely suggest Tom Hodgkinson's How to Be Idle: A Loafer's Manifesto and The Freedom Manifesto: How to Free Yourself from Anxiety, Fear, Mortgages, Money, Guilt, Debt, Government, Boredom, Supermarkets, Bills, Melancholy, Pain, Depression, Work, and Waste or Lin Yutang's The Importance Of Living in it's stead; If you want a decent travelogue, may I politely suggest any Bruce Chatwin's books, and if you really want to read a writer with talent give the exponents of the Gilbertian philosophy of self-aggrandisement both barrels, then I strongly recommend Michael Bywater's Big Babies: or: Why Can't We Just Grow Up?

Posted on March 9, 2011
Billye Fingleton says...
I hated this book but I forced myself to finish it. Putting the authors irritating voice aside, it epitomizes everything wrong with American culture today: worship of the mediocre, travel without seeing anything, polarizing of the Other and fake spirituality.That said, I learned something important about spirituality as well but I'll get to that in a minute.It has to do with learning not to judge (see above, I've become quite judgmental).



When I was dragging myself through this book, I experienced strong waves of hatred for this woman.She missed all of the poverty in those places and all complexities of the cultures she "learned about".She acted like hers was the only travel experience any of her readers have ever had with her "Let me explain what being Balinese means..." demeanor.She couldn't even accurately transcribe the Italian words in the passage of curses ("Molto migliore"???).She spoke about Italy like an annoying travel companion who has been there for five minutes, has read two things about the place and knows five words and acts like the expert and when you visit her there and after 2 days there yourself you can see that she still hasn't seen or learned a thing. She takes what she wants to see from the world and tells readers what she thinks they want to hear about it.She doesn't even give an original spin to these common travel destinations, or even any insight into the expats she does meet.Did she ever mention not liking someone?Did she ever mention any negative emotions about anyone other than "David" or her ex-husband? Did she ever mention any locals being any less than thrilled that she graced them with her presence? Did any other readers feel her jealousy seething when the sexy Brazilian Armenia walked in Wayan's shop? Of course we all did but the author, miss Spiritually Enlightened at Greeting Her Emotions must still not be able to face that one.Or maybe she can't dare mention it because that might make her readers not like her and this woman spends all her energy spinning a version of herself that everyone can like.I guess her spiritual enlightenment only works for exploring and sharing insights about her weight.Or making money off the bored, privileged American public.



Now, how about how offensive she is?Besides her condescending assumption that we are all married 35 year olds stuck in our houses who have never traveled and are relying on her to tell us how it is, she made two references where she tried to make the suffering of her love life out to be comparable that of a refugee ("we had the eyes of refugees" and counseling with the boat people revealed that their suffering too "was all" love story sagas (personally offensive to anyone touched by the world's refugee story).



Okay, I said that I learned something.Yes, I learned something.Important.I looked deeply into my hatred I felt towards this woman throughout the book.I learned that the reason I hated her so much was because I was expecting her to have something insightful to say and I was expecting to learn about the people from an anthropological, non-biased, realistic perspective.Each faux pas she made infuriated me.I wasn't seeing her for her.I was trying to project what I thought was her view of herself onto her.Basically, I was expecting her to live up to how great she tells us she is and when she didn't deliver, time after time, sentence after sentence, I felt some justified sense of triumph and anger at "catching" her, and then feeling immense frustration at not being able to expose her to the world so everyone else would see through her too.Instead, I should learn to accept the book for what it is (horrible) and accept the author as she is (whoever that is) and accept that to her it was suffering, to her it was enlightenment and it does no good to judge her for it (even though I am not spiritually enlightened enough to stop myself).Instead of hating her, I should have shut the book, written this review, and laughed about it.
Posted on March 9, 2011
Cyndi Pribble says...
I could not finish this book.When the author burst into sobs yet again in the middle of prayer, or a conversation, or walking down the street, or (more likely) on the floor of yet another bathroom, I gave up.This is the type of person you meet at a cocktail party and RUN in the other direction after a few minutes when she starts spewing out all her problems at you with no end in sight.Note to the author: I am your reader, not your psychotherapist.I really tried to enjoy the book and even like the author, but after slogging through a couple hundred pages of endlessly self-absorbed chatter, I was worn out and put the book in the Goodwill pile.When she writes, "I discovered my mind was not a very interesting place to be," I have to say, "Amen, sister!"
Posted on March 10, 2011
Lakendra Yamanaka says...
I picked up this book on the strength of good reviews and found myself wanting to throw it at the wall.The author is a fine writer with a good sense of humor who seemed to want to write about her journey to self fullfilment, spiritual awakening and happiness. Instead she came off as a priviledged, slightly spoiled writer who needed an excuse for a writers advance so she could travel for free. She reveals herself to be a spiritual narcissist who obsessively navel gazes. While many passages are light hearted and funny and she is oh, so very clever and witty!! there was no real depth, no real meaningful questions asked or answered except for how she could get more breaks and be FULFILLED.It seemed like an extended article for SELF magazine. Instead order books by Kathleen Norris or even Anne LaMott for God's sake!
Posted on March 10, 2011
Marvella Barcena says...
I find it so surprising--reading the angry, negative reviews--that the people who hated the book hated it for exactly the reasons why some steer clear away from the the spiritual-journey-memoir genre. Yes, the author is self-absorbed, yes, she seems to think of only trite stuff, yes, she seems self-indulgent with her problems. And yes, she's allowed. It is after all a book that is positioned to address these things in the author's self; who otherwise would not be searching for something more: more meaning and more appreciation in/of her life.

Here is a woman who shows all the possibly-perceived-as-lacking-substance thoughts of hers and we are throwing tomatoes at her. One thing, she obviously wasn't afraid of that. She wasn't aiming to be coming off as some deeply wise woman but a fumbling girl-woman trying to break out of what she felt was imminent disaster (had she had the baby and delayed her need to find out what she truly wants from her life she might have left not only her husband, but their child, or most probably ending up not leaving out of guilt and becoming crazy instead: exposing her family to that for years; not an uncommon reality). She is not one for anti-depressants, remember.

This memoir falls in the same category as the TV show Sex and the City (of which it was compared to in a review here). Both get trampled for being supposedly superficial, covering the silly plights of city girls who don't know what they want and yet have everything. But this book--as the TV show--actually are part of a wider story that is illiciting reactions from the public because it reflects the transition in which women in the modern world are experiencing: now that we have equality with men professionally, now that we are liberated from all the limitations being a woman dictated two generations ago, how does that affect us? From a distance, in a glance, it seems that women have all the cards to play with now. But this book and many other works by women and/or about women of this generation show that having all those cards does not mean Happiness.

There are still things in society--in regards to a woman's role--that grates. And then there are things within our Modernised, Westernized, Individualized, Ambitious selves, that are lacking.

This is what Miss Gilbert's search is about, and what she represents.

On a collective level, much of the modern world is in search of God, Spirituality (one just needs to walk through bookstores in the US and see the plethora of soul searching self help books on the shelves). This is what needs to be observed and understood as a phenomena in the West; the small voices, small cries, here and there by those who come up with the balls to share their journeys and thoughts with us--no matter how trite-sounding, how shallow-seeming--are part of a collective howl for the meaning of life.

Elizabeth Gilbert's voice is just one of many that calls for recognition as part of a chorus for something that firstly, many women are hollering about, and secondly, humanity in general--humanity in the first world--are crying for: some kind of guidance, indication, that the collective paths we fought for and chose (the best education, career ambitions realised, a certain amount of money needed to live that certain kind of magazine-lifestyle life--which is what Liz Gilbert's life is a reflection of, remember--love in the form of marriage and what society dictates) are truly the things that give us peace and happiness in the infinite sense.

Eat, Pray, Love might not be that deep, wise voice representing the deep, wise journey into the deep, wise self. But this book's packaging and tone, hell, its WORDS, never did say it was. It is a fumbling--almost child-like in its guilelessness--show of the ego's awareness and needs, and its attempt at searching for what many people from all walks of life only wish they could go out and find: THEMSELVES. SELF, being the keyword here. And in this memoir, ultimately, God, being in each of our selves.

To the people who were disappointed that the author didn't seem to give a hoot about India's poverty, they must have not read the book through: Miss Gilbert never ventured out of her ashram and the little village it is located in, after making a decision to further develop her meditation skills and thus skipping the rest of India. She also ignored Italy's corruption with her indulging in good food and focus on learning and enjoying the Italian language. Again, the critics missed thepoint of this memoir. It's a book about a writer, a New Yorker, a recently-divorced-woman-in-her-early-thirties' journey to heal and find spiritual strength through various means: pleasure first to recover (Italy), spiritual examination and purging (India), combining the two for balance (Bali), which would result hopefully in the kind of substance and depth and balance that so many critics mentioned she lacks.

One doesn't pick this book up to: 1. Be exposed to India's poverty and expect the author to discuss that in depth. 2. Be exposed to Italy's corruption and expect the author to discuss that in depth. 3. Be exposed to Balinese wiles and expect the author to discuss that in depth. (which she actually did in the account of the Balinese woman she raised money for to buy the land the woman needed to build a home).



Next time you pick a book up at the bookstore, call up your powers of perception before purchasing it. A book IS pretty much its cover. Did everyone really expect a book titled "Eat, Pray, Love" A Woman's Search for Everything, to be an experience of religious fervor, one that would reveal the secrets of the universe? It's a story about a girl who thought everything she thought she wanted, would bring her happiness. It didn't. It didn't for her, and possibly not for many other women. If it took this one woman to go to Italy, India, and Indonesia, to get away after a difficult and painful divorce to heal and get perspective--instead of festeringand turning into a pile of flesh in depression--then by all means. Yes, she financed her travels through her book advance--after giving away the suburban home and NYC apartment to her ex-husband. And if she wrote this book for us, it's really for us to appreciate and enjoy the ride with her. Anybody else who got so upset needed only to put the book down and pick another one to their taste. If anything, that's this book's lesson: Do what makes you smile and thankful for life.
Posted on March 12, 2011
Dan Turner says...
This book reminded me of a quote that's served me well in life:"It's a sign of maturity when you begin to fall out of love with your own drama."The author clearly hasn't reached this stage on her path to "enlightenment"!
Posted on March 12, 2011
Arnetta Mervyn says...
Here is a book that either changed people's lives or irritated the bejesus out of them. Count me among the latter.



Eat Pray Love - One Woman's Search for Everything Across Italy, India and Indonesia by Elizabeth Gilbert was supposed to enlighten me. It didn't.



OK -- First the positive: Overall, it is a well-written book. The author takes many complicated metaphysical concepts and makes them readable. The book is divided into sections: Eat, which is the author's journey to Italy; Pray, her pilgrimage to India and Love, where she takes a lover in Bali.



This is about a thirty-something woman looking for spirituality and happiness. She is married, but desperately unhappy for no single reason that she cannot or will not divulge. So, she leaves her husband (and, by the way, gives him all marital property out of supposed "guilt" for leaving him, making me wonder what exactly she did to warrant this)and falls right into another relationship (a-ha! adultery, perhaps?). When the rebound relationship that broke up her marriage falls apart, she now wants to find God. Of course. She claims God spoke to her on the bathroom floor, thus beginning her journey.



But not before she goes to her publisher and secures a $200,000 advance for this book. Makes you wonder, as one reviewer on Amazon pointed out, was the journey retrofitted to the book proposal?



What better way to go find God than in Italy. For four months she eats gelato, practices her Italian with a young man named Luca Spaghetti (If you are going to make up names of allegedly real people, could you find a more sterotypical name? Why not Carmine OrganGrinder?) and gains 23 pounds -- quick to point out to the readers that she was way underweight to beign with.



She learns to enjoy life and be selfish from the Italians - who by the way still find her immensely attractive, although they don't hoot and holler at her like they did 10 years previously. But she is still so damned cute. Just ask her.



On to India. At the Ashram, she learns to meditate and still broods over her lost marriage and subsequent realtionship. Probably the most boring part of the book, except for her conversations with "Richard from Texas" -- a down home, larger than life character who speaks in folksy platitudes that would make Andy Griffith proud. He also bestows our author with her nickname "Groceries" because she was emaciated from grief from crying for the millionth time over her beloved David. As one reviewer from Amazon said, "What kind of nickname is Groceries?"



I honestly believe she made these people up. Reminds me of "Go Ask Alice" -- supposedly the real story of the drug-addicted Anonymous -- until it was revealed that the protagonist was a fictitious composite of the author's psychiatric patients. Boo.



Then Bali. She ends her self-imposed celibacy with an older Brazilian man. High on orgasmic ecstasy, out of the supposed goodness of her heart, she asks her friends to send $18K in donations to help a single mother, an alleged friend of Ms. Gilbert's, who is portrayed as a con artist because she didn't buy a house in the timeframe coinciding with the termination of Ms. Gilbert's visa. I always thought that a gift should be a gift without strings attached -- especially coming from someone who supposedly found God. I wanted to ask Ms. Gilbert "What Would Jesus Do?"



My biggest problem with this tome is that this 30-something woman basically is looking for applause for running off for a year, obstensibly supported by a $200K book advance, to "find God." I'm sure millions of women would love to leave their everyday lives and travel the world to do nothing but self analyze. If she had done volunteer work, I may have felt differently. If she went through some real hardship, I could sympathize. But she was in an incompatible marriage, then dumped by the guy she left her husband for. She should perhaps speak to those battling life-threatening diseases, or raising children alone, or taking care of an elderly parent, or worried about where their next meal is coming from.



And for all of her self-realization and navel-gazing to end her dependence on men, Ms Gilbert has, as pointed out by anotherAmazon reviewer, married her Brazilian and moved to new Jersey. She could have saved Penguin Books a whole lot of money by getting in her car and going through the Lincoln Tunnel. I wonder how long before she ends up back on the bathroom floor.



Posted on March 16, 2011

Leave a Comment

Your Name
Your Email
Comments
Human Check. Type 3227.