Elizabeth Gilbert's memoir, Eat, Pray, Love, is one of those comforting books that reassures you you're not alone in being human, flawed, and emotional. It's an excellent book to read while going through some kind of crisis, but even if life is pretty much okay, there is much to love in this journey of self—and world—exploration.
Struggling through a grueling and nasty divorce, Gilbert grows increasingly ill and depressed. She starts to wonder about God and begins to examine her spiritual self. So she decides to take a year to pursue three things in three different countries: pleasure in Italy, devotion in India, and balance in Indonesia. As she says, it is an interesting coincidence that each country starts with "I."
In Rome she lingers over delicious meals and thirstily soaks up the language. At an ashram in India, she meditates daily, coming to terms with her inner self in all its intricacies, flaws, and beauty. For the final months, she travels to Bali, spends time with an elderly medicine man, and observes a culture in which balance is of utmost importance. Through it all, Gilbert introduces us to the strange and loving people she seems to attract. If this sounds like some kind of sappy, self-helpish, "I triumphed, so can you!" book, it isn't, so read more
Gilbert's writing is vivid, intimate, and very funny. She is completely unabashed when describing her own emotional crises, the lows she experienced, and the tumultuous relationships she endured. With equal generosity she shares the joy, triumph, and freedom she gains from her year of exploration.
After reading Eat, Pray, Love, I had the sense that Elizabeth Gilbert was my friend. So when I learned that the book was being made into a movie, I was happy for my new friend, especially since it's being produced by Brad Pitt's production company, which already brought us Running With Scissors. I have my fears about the film, however. It would be a shame if the movie version were to take the complexities of human life in this book and trivialize them so they fit into 100 minutes of nice, neat plot. Also, Julia Roberts is said to be playing the role of Gilbert, which doesn't quite sit right with me. There is something reserved about Julia Roberts, despite that giant, friendly smile, and I have a hard time picturing her chattering away with strangers, voraciously learning the Italian language, or dancing without a care in a Balinese bar.
My recommendation is to read the book—and soon!—before you can't think of Eat, Pray, Love without seeing Julia Roberts' face.


In Puncto
Diesel
Juan Antonio Lopez
i feel like i so need to read this book right now!
1This book sounds fascinating. The great cover design and title should get it the attention it obviously deserves. Not many memoirs give one such a close feeling of kinship with the author. I hope the movie does it justice.
2OOoh! I can't wait to check this one out. You should copy this post in The Book Club Suite!!!
3I am currently reading Lucky, by Alice Sebold (she wrote The Lovely Bones; which is now being made into a movie by Peter Jackson). I recommend The Lovely Bones it is GREAT!
4I feel like this is something I need to read though. I think this will be my next book!
Good call, Lindsb! I just posted in the Book Club. I will be putting up more book reviews in the next week or so, and will post those reviews in the Book Club as well. It's a really cool group!
5thanks buzz, this book is going on my list!
6Just bought the last copy in our local bookstore. Thanks for the recommendation, Buzz.
7Oooh, this book is sooooooooooo good! My stepmother gave this to me when I was going through a hard time and it is so inspiring. Everyone should read it ASAP!
8Wow, that sounds so good.
9I just finished & enjoyed "Eat Pray & Love" because I could really relate to each country and many of Gilberts Experiences. My husband and I were in Italy in October 07 for our honeymoon and visited many of the same places Gilbert has visited, had some of the same food experiences and afterthoughts. I grew up in Indian culture, have been to india, mediate and do yoga, so this part especially was easy to relate to and fun to know another white girl was getting a lot out of the Indian experience. Gilberts experience with depression and "happy" pills was similar to mine as well and my thoughts about pills and depression were well articulated. Indonesian trek was not familiar to me, but enjoyed the story of Gilbert coming into her own as a 34 year woman. If I hadn't had the life experiences as I did, perhaps it would have not been so enjoyable. But that I could relate to her experiences made it a kind of personal experience for me - I felt like I connected with the writer because of my own life. I wouldn't knock her book as a self-absorbed novel, but a pretty gutsy move to be able to express some very sensitive and personal experiences. Sometimes I felt like I was reading her diary, sometimes it felt like I was listening to a good friend talk about her travels and other times, I felt like I was reading about myself. We're all self-absorbed a little, yet we also tend to be a little afraid of intimacy. That Gilbert tactfully told us a very personal story about herself is pretty cool!
10I'm surprised to read there's been a backlash against, "Eat, Pray, Love." I mean if somebody doesn't like it, wouldn't it be simpler to just move on to something they do like? I found the book to be meaningful and real while managing to be entertaining. Elizabeth Gilbert raises some really important questions without being preachy, such as, what is the value of peacefulness in an increasingly turbulent world?
I guess to those who are straining at finding fault with such a harmless tome I might quote Jack Nicholson: "You can't handle the truth!"
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