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UK Mall 1 - Eat, Pray, Love: One Woman's Search for Everything

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List Price: £7.99
Our Price: £3.45
Your Save: £ 0.00 ( % )
Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
Manufacturer: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Binding: Paperback EAN: 9780747585664 ISBN: 0747585660 Label: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Manufacturer: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Number Of Pages: 352 Publication Date: 2007-03-05 Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Studio: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: I think Gilbert's next book and the Eat Pray Love film should be boycotted Comment: I am APPALLED by the fact that this book made it to the New York Times bestseller list and, apparently, will be made into a movie with....Julia Roberts (is this true?)
What does this tell us about American culture and values??? Why should such a shallow piece of work written by a self-absorbed narcissist receive such fame and accolades? I am truly mystified. This book was all about HERSELF. Poor little me who received an ENORMOUS advance to write this book before she even left the States. Who whinged and moaned and felt sorry for herself while in Italy, can you imagine??? She had no interest in visiting the fabulous museums, art galleries, churches, etc. but rather spend hundreds of Euros buying lingerie and eating amazing meals (by herself) in restaurants.
Here is an immensely PRIVILEGED young woman (yes, she is talented, she can write) who provides us with insights on what? Herself and her insecurities. What did we learn about Italy? Niente. Perhaps where to find the best pizza in Naples.
I couldn't get through her ramblings and vapid non-stop chatter in India (she talks too much). Nothing on the poverty or living conditions there or the plight of Indian women which I would have been interested in reading about. Indonesia was just more of the same. Did anyone notice that she didn't even touch on the tsunami disaster only to say that - thank god - it didn't reach her island when she was there??? So engrossed in HERSELF she doesn't notice, really, what's going on around her.
I wonder if she has read THREE CUPS OF TEA, that marvellous book about building schools in Afghanistan and Pakistan. Is THAT going to be made into a movie???
I would love to see Gilbert being sent to Iraq to cover events there. Amidst the dire reality, would she be moaning about having a bad hair day? Or, perhaps, she'd write 5 pages about her ambivalent feelings towards a soldier (or maybe an Iraqi) she thinks she has a crush on.
Gilberts is now an immensely wealthy woman because of the sales of this book. This saddens me because it illustrates how skewered values are in American society. All I can hope for is that she's donating a lot of her money to charities and very good causes.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Refreshingly addictive Comment: I couldn't put it down. It was well structured, inviting, funny and came across as a very genuine book. Well worth a read.
Customer Rating:      Summary: I didn't want it to end Comment: Eat, Pray, Love: One Woman's Search for Everything
I loved this book and tried to make it last as long as possible because I found it so uplifting to read. It's a true story that covers a period of a few years in the authors life. It takes you through her ups and downs over that time and you feel as though you are travelling with her on her physical and emotional journey. I think that alot of people could learn alot from it and even if they don't it's still a fantastic read.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Brilliant Comment: I read this book while on holiday and it was a perfect beach read. My favourite part of the book was the time spent in Italy, her descriptions are excellent. I am going to give this book to all of my friends and I hope that they enjoy it as much as i did.
Customer Rating:      Summary: A Bit Too Cliché Comment: If something looks like it could be "chick lit" and aimed at the female gender I usually avoid it like the plague, but as a friend lent me her copy and asked me to read it, I agreed. I kept waiting for it to get going, but it never really did. I found it rather same old, same old and a bit cliché i.e. a woman going through a difficult time post divorce, followed by a rebound relationship goes off in search of finding herself...hmmm...where have I heard that before? It was all a bit too much of a whinge fest for me. If going to sit in a cave and meditate helped her...great...I try to develop my "higher consciousness" on a regular basis, so I've no problem with that pursuit, or any other form of self-development but it is nothing new, and nothing enlightening. Having said all that I gave it a 3 and not a 2 because I enjoyed some of the comments made by Richard and one or two others. Italy was the worst part for me.
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