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randomname7's review against another edition
4.0
Great book for the nomad in all of us... even if it's only a nomad of the mind.
eclipse27's review against another edition
4.0
Great book for the nomad in all of us... even if it's only a nomad of the mind.
amymadd's review against another edition
4.0
4.5 stars. Definitely got me excited to get traveling again.
ehaase's review against another edition
5.0
Inspiring and terrifying--a recently divorced middle-aged woman tells her true story of giving up everything to travel around the world for years, living on the kindness of others (and royalties from her writing). Inspiring, because she shows that you don't have to be rich or athletic or a man or have the top-of-the-line backpacking equipment to enjoy the best places on earth. Terrifying, because as my study abroad program did a few years before this, it made me unsatisfied with life-as-usual, to want to just pick up and go, leaving everything behind. This book made me terribly jealous.
hannibal812's review against another edition
4.0
This was a really fun read about starting over and LIVING your life as a participant. Live your life as a HUMAN and not an American. Smile more, say YES to trying everything life has to offer. A great reminder that you can't take it with you and that you don't need a big house full of stuff. We need so little to live a full rewarding life that can impact others and sometimes make a difference in many peoples lives. From my University President, Minor Myers, Jr.: “Go into the world and do well. But more importantly, go into the world and do good.”
natyoung73's review against another edition
3.0
It was really interesting and amazing to read of her travels. I don't think I could do what she did and travel to all those remote areas by myself, but it definitely was interesting.
bookdork's review against another edition
5.0
I thoroughly enjoyed this books and it makes me want to head out on adventure. Not that I am brave enough (yet) to adventure as Rita does.....but a girl can dream.
katie_mo's review against another edition
4.0
A friend recommended this book to me a few years ago, lauding it as "Eat, Pray, Love, only better," and was she ever right. I loved this book: more anthropological in nature, and without any feeling of pretension, it spoke to my heart.
Rita Golden Gelman ends her marriage of many years in her forties, and sets off to live a life of exploration. Bali and New Zealand are just two of the places where Golden Gelman makes her home over the course of many years of travel: one thing that lends itself to the strength of these memoirs is that Golden Gelman is writing many years after her adventures. She did not set out to find herself, or make changes to herself that she would bring back to her life in the U.S. She wanted to know people, their stories, what happens in their daily lives, what is important to them, to us. She wanted to lose herself in the lives of other people, in order to find a better connection with the world and all it has to offer, including its people.
There is no romantic lilt to this story: Golden Gelman had left behind that part of her life when her marriage ended, and there are no moments where the reader wonders whom she'll end up with, or what happy ending the story may have. Golden Gelman is completely and utterly herself, and she is brilliant. She admits her errors in new places, or how difficult it is to be alone in a country without knowing a language. She discusses her isolation openly and honestly, and these moments often lead to a demonstration of the kindness that exists within people everywhere.
I feel that I'm rambling, but I wish I could find the words to describe how inspirational this book was. A few weeks ago I attended a dinner event alone, something I might not have had the courage to do a few months ago, but I was ready to do it now, and Golden Gelman's book was the final puff of confidence I needed to leap off that particular ledge. We all have the courage to do the things we want to do, we just have to find a way to make them happen.
Rita Golden Gelman ends her marriage of many years in her forties, and sets off to live a life of exploration. Bali and New Zealand are just two of the places where Golden Gelman makes her home over the course of many years of travel: one thing that lends itself to the strength of these memoirs is that Golden Gelman is writing many years after her adventures. She did not set out to find herself, or make changes to herself that she would bring back to her life in the U.S. She wanted to know people, their stories, what happens in their daily lives, what is important to them, to us. She wanted to lose herself in the lives of other people, in order to find a better connection with the world and all it has to offer, including its people.
There is no romantic lilt to this story: Golden Gelman had left behind that part of her life when her marriage ended, and there are no moments where the reader wonders whom she'll end up with, or what happy ending the story may have. Golden Gelman is completely and utterly herself, and she is brilliant. She admits her errors in new places, or how difficult it is to be alone in a country without knowing a language. She discusses her isolation openly and honestly, and these moments often lead to a demonstration of the kindness that exists within people everywhere.
I feel that I'm rambling, but I wish I could find the words to describe how inspirational this book was. A few weeks ago I attended a dinner event alone, something I might not have had the courage to do a few months ago, but I was ready to do it now, and Golden Gelman's book was the final puff of confidence I needed to leap off that particular ledge. We all have the courage to do the things we want to do, we just have to find a way to make them happen.
delanaloo's review against another edition
4.0
Published about 5 years before [b:Eat, Pray, Love|19501|Eat, Pray, Love|Elizabeth Gilbert|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1269870432s/19501.jpg|3352398], this is (in my opinion) a far more engaging story of a lone female traveler finder herself by exploring the world. Rita Goldman Gelmanâs travels show a remarkable âjump and the net will appearâ philosophy combined with an honest interest in the people she meets that I find admirable. If only I could travel with that much openness and faith!