Non-fiction. History books. Science for amateur readers. Politics. Social sciences. Essay collections. War reporting. Travel writing. All of them and more reviewed by the Bookworm. Pulp fiction not allowed.
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Saturday, 12 May 2012
Elizabeth Gilbert, Eat Pray Love
I was very cautious when approaching this book. Say what you will, you'll never persuade me that 'bestseller' equals 'good book'. Eat, Pray, Love was a bestseller not too long ago. It sold like insane and was turned into a movie a few years after publishing. NOT a good sign.
I chose it because I was suffering from overdose of heavy subjects. War and politics is all right, but sometimes you just need a break.
I gulped it down within a day. It was entertaining. Well-written. Trendy. Not particularly enlightening.
The heroine of Eat, Pray, Love (Gilbert herself, I wonder? Really, really?) takes a year off and travels around Italy, India and Indonesia, getting over a difficult divorce and searching for God. She starts with heavy depression, ends with a new affair and puts a lot of sightseeing in between. Yeah, a generous amount of money is the best possible cure for depression. I'm being slightly sarcastic, I admit. More cruel than necessary, perhaps. Maybe I'm just jealous.
I found it extremely difficult to identify with Liz, mainly because of this crucial money level difference. I don't even know people that loaded. I want different things in life, I have other values. Still - she's likeable. Difficult to take seriously after stories from war zones, but likeable. Sometimes even inspiring.
If only Eat, Pray, Love was less like a sequel to Sex and the City...
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