Eat, Pray, Love
August 2007 - Book of The Month
Eat Pray
Love, by Elizabeth Gilbert
This book is an
extraordinary and fun read. I picked it up at the
urging of a dear friend. And, as the kind woman at the
bookstore pointed out, it is a must-read for any woman
of in her 30's-40's. In fact, any
woman who has
made the journey through self-discovery is sure to
resonate with this articulate, funny, and lovable
woman's journey. Check it out...
From
the book jacket:
By
the time she turned thirty, Elizabeth Gilbert had
everything a modern, educated, ambitious American woman
was supposed to want— a husband, a house in the
country, a successful career. But in-stead of feeling
happy and fulfilled, she was consumed with panic, grief
and confusion. She went through a divorce, a crushing
depression, another failed love and the complete
eradication of every-thing she ever thought she was
supposed to be.
To recover from all of this, Gilbert took a radical
step. In order to give herself the time and space to
find out who she really was and what she really wanted,
she got rid of her belongings, quit her job, left her
loved ones behind and undertook a year-long journey
around the world, all alone. Eat, Pray, Love is the
absorbing chronicle of that year. Gilbert's aim was to
visit three places where she could examine one aspect
of her own nature, set against the backdrop of a
culture that has traditionally done that one thing very
well. In Italy, she studied the art of pleasure,
learning to speak Italian and gaining the twenty-three
happiest pounds of her life. India was for the art of
devotion, where, with the help of a native guru and a
surprisingly wise Texan, she embarked on four months of
austere spiritual exploration. Finally, in Indonesia,
she sought her ultimate goal: balance-namely, how to
somehow build a life of equilibrium between worldly
enjoyment and divine transcendence. Looking for these
answers on the island of Bali, she became the pupil of
an elderly, ninth-generation medicine man and also fell
in love in the very best way—unexpectedly.
An intensely articulate, sensible, moving and funny
memoir of self-discovery, Eat, Pray, Love is about what
can happen when you claim responsibility for your own
contentment. It is also about the adventures that can
transpire when a woman stops trying to live in
imitation of society's ideals. This is a story certain
to touch anyone who has ever woken up to the
unrelenting need for change.
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