Rating: ![1 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-1-0.gif) Summary: Just boring.... Review: I don't want to say too much about the CP. Had a hard time trying to finish it, it was just plain boring, with a terrible language. And what goes for the insights, well, most ambulatory people have come to see them by themselves. It's simplified basic psychology for the most. And with all the sequals from Redfield, this must be a really undeserved moneymachine ripping unsecure (?) people of their money.Can't begin to explain what a relief it was to pick up Dharma Bum by Jack Kerouac after the CP.
Rating: ![1 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-1-0.gif) Summary: The Celestine Profit Review: The only way I could muster up any respect for James Redfield, the author of this "book" is if I thought that maybe he wrote it as a scam to squeeze some money out of new-age yuppies. That at least would lend some credence to a work which resorts to every conceivable new-age cliche to express a trite and even somewhat facistic new-age philosophy. JR uses the "government coverup" cliche to appeal to conspiracy theory buffs; has the "insights" written in Aramaic to give them some sort of biblical authority, but then hs them found in Central America to exploit the new-age concentration on lost Central American civilizations such as the Mayas; he uses quantum mechanics to appeal to "new paradigm" thinkers in scientific fields (even though Redfield himself seems to be inhabiting a Ptolemaic universe where the Earth still moves around the sun. See the chapter, "the message of the mystics" and check out his mystical experience of the moon to see what I mean). Alone, the notion that an ancient Aramaen text would be spewing out new-age truisms regarding co-dependent relationship dynamics is laughable; together with an incredibly poorly written book, it is deplorable. For those who weren't able to read through this entire book to it's conclusion, I sympathize. But it really is worth picking it up and finishing it just to see the thrilling culmination where JR envisions an inevitable coming technocracy where technology will be advanced enough (emphatically NOT at the expense of the environment) to allow us more leisure time as a species to pursue spiritual matters, thus poo-pooing the notion that of Karma yoga where spiritual equilibrium arises out of one's devotion to work. He also envisions a kind of new age pyramid scheme where people will be giving money to folks who offer them spiritual guidance (kind of sets himself up for a nice tidy fortune, don't he?) A direct quote from the book: "When people come into our lives at just the right time to give us the answers we need, we should give them money." Urk! I enjoy spiritual literature. I had this book recommended to me by a friend whose opinion I had previously trusted. I don't really understand how the Celestine meme has infected so many minds. I know that those who love the book have a built in defense against critics which says that those who don't like the book weren't meant to receive its teachings at this time, aren't open-minded enough, etc. Hogwash! Spend some time reading classic religious texts: Meister Eckhart, Lao Tzu, The Upanishads, or read some Sufi tales. Or read modern spiritual works that are at least worthwhile: Thomas Moore, Carlos Castaneda, Matthew Fox. Do anything but expend your spiritual energy in the fast food drive-thru of the Celestine Prophecy.
Rating: ![1 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-1-0.gif) Summary: New Age Psycho babble Review: The best aspect of this book was that I didn't have to pay for it. I was given this book by a girlfriend that insists in "gave her clarity" and a "course to live her life by". After reading this book I had realized I needed a new girlfriend. The adventure story as vehicle for life fullfilment with the Catholic Church as the bad guys. Pure drivel. Maybe Clancy should write about finding nivarna in a retired Russian submarine. I was very amused to see that after the commercial success of this book, Redfield has discovered a tenth insight. That says it all.
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: This book is a great book. Review: This book is not only a story but a guide to tapping into great things. u should read it if u get a chance.
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: A Fabulous Book for the Open Minded Soul Review: If you are open to new ideas and unhappy with the ones you already have then this book is for you. If on the other hand you are set in your ways, and negative about anything good then you might better look elsewhere. This book is about love, enlightenment, Peace and change. James Redfield takes the beliefs of many and puts them in an understandable and engrossing story that anyone can comprehend. If you get tingles when you talk of spiritual matters then read this book. If you like well written stories that are easy to read and have underlying lessons to be learned, read this book. I personally have 3 copies but I never get to see a one because I always have someone who wants to borrow it, sometimes more than once.
Rating: ![3 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-3-0.gif) Summary: Time of your life Review: The book offers a lot more than just philosophical views of life. The new awareness this books speaks can relate to people at different times. Some people who are at a critical time in their life will find that this book can bring a new view of life that just might make you see the world in a whole new light. The books is uplifting and really sets things in perspective.
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: It's not for everyone...coincendence? Review: Here we have this best seller. In my eyes, The Celestine Prophecy is an amazing book. What I find the most interesting is the great discrepancy in reviews...it's readers either loved it or wanted to grind it up in their garbage disposal so as to never see it again. This is where I think Redfield did his job...and did it well. Those whom it should have affected and allowed to have it affect them are the books biggest fans. Redfield wrote a novel that obviously means the world to him. His presentation was amazing, and he graciously avoided the complexities of writing that many philosophers fall into. He took an unbelievably strenuous topic and made it apply to everyday life, just as the actual insights do. These insights are not events that require you to have a PHD to understand. They occur every second of every day, from the route you take home from work to how many cups of coffee you have in the morning. I think it's wonderful that an author like Redfield was b! rave enough to write about a topic that is obviously not understood by everyone, but means so much to some. Congratulations, Redfield, on a beautiful book. Even if you only touched one reader, you've done more than most authors of today. I believe that the way you acquire the novel is key to the very enjoyment, however. An old friend of mine recommended it...it took me a few months, but i bought it, took my time and thoroughly read it, sometimes putting it down for days at at time to take it all in. When I finished it, I felt it was my "duty" to pass it on to someone that it would touch as it touched me. I met a man in the airport, and we shared a couple of drinks and our life stories. The strange coincendences that we had in common were so overwhelming to me that I realized that he, too needed to see what Redfield was all about. He promised to read it, and although we never spoke again, I'm quite sure it touched him too. Find a friend, lover, neighbor or ! stranger to give this to...after reading it, you'll know wh! o it should be, and that's no coincedence.
Rating: ![1 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-1-0.gif) Summary: A story fit for elementary school students -- maybe? Review: I was persuaded to read this book by the praises of my college acquaintance, a major in the field of classics. Two afternoons later when I finished the book, I couldn't help but feel a pressing dissapointment. I wondered: "Is this really the literary level that most people enjoy reading?" I am relieved to learn -- from the majority of these comments -- that it is not. People really do deserve more credit.
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: It deserves more...... Review: 3 stars? Only 3 stars? I give this book 5 STARS!! Let me tell you that this book improved not only my life, but, to date, 14 other people for whom I bought or told about the book. These people have all come back to me and, each in their own way, thanked me for enriching their minds. For me, this book took my own life experiences, without preaching, and directed them through a different thought process. Like through a funnel, my life experiences could finally be seen, through only my eyes, a constanst stream of universality. Since then, I slowly began to practice certain methods of thought, from the Insights that truly moved me (rational philosophy and strong logic). To say the least, I am very glad that I did. I suggest that everyone who is ready to face themselves on the most personal and spiritual level possible; everyone who seeks evolution; everyone who seeks a higher sense of self-awareness; you owe it to yourself to give this book a read, with open mind! . Genuinely,
Rating: ![3 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-3-0.gif) Summary: The book that started it all Review: Don't make the mistake of writing this book off JUST because it has become so popular. Admittedly it doesn't have the passion or insight of "Jesus of Nazareth and the Missing Years" by Richard Patton, or the profound writing of Dostovevsky's "The Idiot" or the pathos of Joseph Heller's "Catch 22". What it does have, is its finger on the pulse of the present consciousness that asks "What more is there? This can't be all there is"? Celestine prophecy has become a prisoner of its own success, but for good reason. It is a finger that points at some profound truths. For people that haven't had access or interest in 'Newage' belief systems, this book is a great Reader's Digest. It, more perhaps than any other book before it, has made 'spiritual' an openly used word and concept. If it were only for this, it would be worth reading - but it is more. The naivety of the writing is what makes it so accessible to the general public and therefo! re a great opener for people who might otherwise dismiss the word 'spiritual' from their daily language
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