I am currently reading "Eat, Pray, Love" by Elizabeth Gilbert. It is a #1 best seller in the nation right now, which usually turns me off , but I wanted to read this the moment I heard about it because I had just gotten back from Italy and am in love with India. The book takes place in 3 different countries; Italy, India, and Indonesia. I don't really have a thing for Indonesia, but maybe I will once I read that part of the book.
I am about half-way through the book and... its okay. Usually when a book gets a lot of hype I expect it to go above and beyond, so I am let down. If I just found this book and randomly read it, I would probably think it was amazing. But, because it is a #1 best seller, it needs to be more than amazing and it isn't. I am really into memoirs right now and "Eat, Pray, Love" is a memoir of sorts. Her writing style is okay, more than once she has used a cliche and said "I know this is a cliche and I HATE writing in cliches." That bugs me because if writing is your profession and you don't like a certain technique then you can choose not to use it, but she chooses to use it and states afterward that she hates the technique that she just used. Okay I'll stop whining about this now.
The narrator talks too much about how terribly heart-wrenching, yet inevitable her divorce is. She is a whiny narrator, but I keep reading it because when she describes the city of Rome and it's little secrets I get hooked. She is wonderful at describing the setting of cities, the looks of people and the little characters that come into her life. So sometimes she can be a good writer and that is why I keep reading... and because it is cool to read about Rome and think "oh yea I remember seeing that fountain and she is right about the way the sunlight hits it."
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