Rating: Summary: Kleenex Required Review: I loved this book. It is touching in a quiet, profound way. Almost all of the essays made me cry (I'm a complete softie of the TV-ads-make-me-cry variety.) The stories in this book are straight forward, remarkably honest and often hilarious - I'd love to meet the author. I will definitely be reading some of her other books - what better recommendation can I give?! (This book was recommended to me by sewgeeky.com, another hero of mine!)
Rating: Summary: Finger on the Pulse Review: A gorgeous, funny, original, insightful book that can breathe new life into anyone who feels the tiniest bit stale in their devotional practices (as well as new life into just about anyone else who might read it). Makes me realize all over again that Christianity (or any other religious path, if followed sincerely) is a living organism waiting for us to tap into its richness. Anne Lamott legitimizes my own shipwrecked prayers and validates my own unorthodox approach to God. TRAVELING MERCIES should be required reading for very priest, minister, pastor, seminarian and long-time church/synagogue-goer. It will help keep us from getting embedded in (and deadened by) habits of posture and vocabulary that are naturally generated by any religious institution or repeated personal devotional practice.
Rating: Summary: I wish I knew her ! Review: Always a voracious reader,I can't believe I missed this one when it was first published. Ms. Lamott's aecerbic wit kept me riveted to this one. She describes her inner demons so acutely that I recognized many of them as my own. As a product of the sixties I could relate to many of her trials, starting with experimental excesses & finishing with eating disorders. Anne has lived my life & described it better than I ever could. At times I had to stop reading reading to dry my tears...resulting from both uproarious laughter & silent weeping. If I had known that she was to be a guest of Rosie O'Donnells I would have changed my schedule to see that show. I can only hope I see it in re-runs & I know that God loves her in a very special, very personal,very DIFFERENT way. It reminded me that God has a sense of humor-he made US, didn't he?
Rating: Summary: Makes Me Want to Become a Baptist Review: This book is full of witty, touching, sad, lovely stories and wise insights from this wonderful writer, Anne Lamott. I've read almost everything she has written, and while her fiction seems somewhat dull and bland, her nonfiction is supreme, full of passion and love and humility--it's hard not to think of her as having an expansive, generous soul. I belong to a church I rarely visit, a church full of stiff ceremony, dusty old prayer books, and stale bread--they should all have to read this book, I think, the members of my church, so some feeling can flow back into their cold blue veins, and they can remember that humanity, love, compassion, and forgiveness are at the heart of true religion. I love this book.
Rating: Summary: Spirituality for the Non-Religious Review: What a lovely book of revelation, personal quest, and spiritual fulfillment! Anne Lamott takes the reader along on a personal journey that is both difficult and heartbreaking, but which rings with the realization that there is life after no-matter-what-kind of previous life you might have had. We travel her road of addiction and grief as she searches for the right path in her life, while at the same time we become involved and caring in her life. When she stumbles into a community church after years of denying the need for religion, not to mention Christianity, she finds the home that she didn't even realize she needed. Her subsequent acceptance of Christ as her savior is as much surprise as it is revelation, and it becomes a life-changing event. Not only can she fight, and defeat, her addiction, she can also pray with her son whenever life affords a problem that seems insurmountable. But this is not a schmaltzy touchy-feely book of fundamentalist dogma. It is truly a blessing, both for the author and for the reader. The simple acceptance of God and His healing power along with the love and comfort of a supportive community illustrate the changes that can occur when one is ready to surrender to a higher power. It ends too soon and one longs for "the rest of the story." Let's all hope that Anne Lamott will continue the saga of her spiritual journey.
Rating: Summary: These Mercies Review: Read this book!I first saw Anne Lamott on the Rosie O'Donnell show, with her dread locks and warm personality, I put this book on that mile long list in my head of books to get. It was quite some time after, I was getting books to take with me on a trip that Traveling Mercies became the perfectly timed book for me to read. Anne Lamott writes like she's talking to you as a friend. I would recommend this book to anyone, even if they are not a religious person. For me, it spanned beyond religion, and became a book about life. It came into my life at a time when my mother was having cancer surgery, so perfectly timed. This is a story about Anne's journey while finding her faith, becoming a mother, dealing with very large problems and passing her quirky wisdom onto us, the reader.
Rating: Summary: 3.5 stars: Stand-up spirituality; or, Religion at the Improv Review: Anne Lamott makes Kathleen Norris seem stodgy and Rebecca Walker seem prim. She writes with a crackle and snap that can be endearing or enervating, depending on her topic. The story is familiar: a child of the 60s discovers that religion isn't just for octogenarian bishops, it's for cool people like you and me. Cool = progressive, in case we haven't learned that by now. There are passages that should be read aloud to a friend or relative or spouse or captive listener, to be fully appreciated. On substance abuse, Lamott combines the wisdom of the Serenity Prayer with the savagely funny humor of Denis Leary. Truly memorable. If we read this as an autobiography of a funny & fascinating gal, we won't be disappointed. But if we're looking for a faith that transcends the narrow, doctrinaire confines of hollery redhamite progressivism, we probably won't find it in "Traveling Mercies." When Lamott writes about abortion, she is ardently pro-choice, as might befit someone whose first child succumbed to a "legal medical procedure." But her detailing of the after-effects of that procedure could be used as material in a pro-life argument. Also, witness her reluctance when counseled by a clergyman to end her second pregnancy in a similar fashion. I wanted to throw this book across the room when Lamott describes a man being mean to his dog and says it was the most heartless, brutal, inhumane thing she had ever witnessed. Then she goes on, flippantly, casually, to detail how she once grabbed her child with such force that her fingernails became embedded in his forearm. But it was all right, because she didn't mean it. You see, Anne Lamott is one of the cool people, and cool people don't do mean things. (We could ask which is the more inhumane action: striking a dog with a stick or dismembering a gestating baby, but this rhetorical question might force some people to think. Heaven forbid that persons who are unaccustomed to serious cogitation about moral truths should be forced to think about these things.) There's something endearing, even to this curmudgeon, about Lamott's wisecracks & dreadlocks; her voice is neither omniscient nor Olympian, but she is always ready to give an opinion, and sometimes we find the opinion disagreeable. We're glad to have read "Traveling Mercies," but also glad to have bought it at a used bookstore. There's a fine line between the endearingly hip and the gratingly flippant, and Lamott crosses this line dozens of times, with almost reckless abandon.
Rating: Summary: Religion for the non-religious Review: I thoroughly enjoyed this book. Lamott's struggle with faith is a real-life, sometimes sorrowful, sometimes joyful, account--just like it is for the rest of us, but with her special gifts to make us go there and experience it with her. It is not heavy-handed in proselytizing, and is a good read for religious and non-religious alike.
Rating: Summary: A nice book for imperfect people Review: When was the last time you laughed with your friends listening to them telling the most embarassing stories of their lives? Remember you cried a little too, saying "Oh, it sounds just like me." Sitting down with Ann Lamott's book is almost like meeting a friend you haven't seen for a long time and listening to her endless, funny, scary, sad stories. This book is a must-read for everybody, who has problems with self-esteem (and who doesn't?). It's a book by and about a very imperfect person, full of inner conflicts and fears, who seems to have found the way to love herself. Oh, and there is a little philosophy too, some of it is actually quite controversial. But being a simple person like you and me Ann Lamott probably didn't consider lecturing you on "highly spiritual matters" to be a good idea, so she put it simply - perfect God and imperfect people can have much fun together.
Rating: Summary: It's a non-fiction essay(!) Review: For those who aren't interested in the non-fiction essay genre, don't read this book! If you are interested, you'll like this. 'Nuff said.
|