Rating:  Summary: THREE PAGES AND I WAS HOOKED!!! Review: I saw the author on TV and immediately wanted to buy his book-It can be a "handkerchief read" at times, but Hanut compensates with a very irreverent sense of humor and a great sense of compassion and fairness-I learned a lot, cried a lot, laughed a lot- What else could we ask of a book??Highly recommended!!!
Rating:  Summary: A GREAT HUMAN STORY Review: Instead of facile theories and grand philosophical statements about "The Feminine Face of God", the reader enjoys wonder and astonishment; This is High Drama, very Latino-Camp,and will reach any person who understands what it means to hope-or to fear;It's a compelling book about a phenomenal Cult figure.Three thumbs up!!!
Rating:  Summary: The easiest- and cheapest- way to visit Mexico City! Review: The "Road to guadalupe" is a work of persuasive originality and penetrating insight; The author holds up a sharp, clear lens to the dramatic chaos of Mexico City; In short, this is a groundbreaking work, as well as an elegant and illuminating analysis of Faith and superstition. Compelling and impressive!
Rating:  Summary: Excellent! Review: The author establishes a seminal argument for the true wrongs at the core of catholicism. His prose is thoughtful but spare. his work is an exemplary blend of polemic, poetry and journalism, a outrageous and furious tale. Wonderful!!! I recently spoke with Mr Hanut during one of his L.A appearances; He is a very nice and very articulate young man. A wonderful new talent and new energy to hail!
Rating:  Summary: a masterpiece of oral history Review: The mystical origins and spiritual forces that surrounds the apparitions of the Lady of Guadalupe are here finely told and analyzed; The book helps understanding the power that both embodies and defines the mexican soul.And it's astounding, knowing it's a work written by an european author.And there is also the puzzle of the author's quest itself-for the first time, we have here a book that is based not only on historical facts but also on a human journey spent seeking for these facts.It is a fully realized work of art.
Rating:  Summary: The Road to Guadalupe by Eryk Hanut Review: The Road to Guadalupe: A Modern Pilgrimage to the Goddess of the Americas, by Eryk HanutIn this amazing work, Eryk Hanut, as modern Everyman, undertakes a spiritual journey to discover the truth at the heart of Guadalupe, the presence so beloved by Mexico (where she resides) as well as much of the rest of the world. His odyssey is at once magical. spiritual, fantastical and--at times-- hysterical. For Mexico, as he quickly discerns, is no single entity, no homogenous reality. It is, on the contrary, a mix of wild disparates-beauty and squalor, reverence and fakery, potent icons from the past and modern kitschy variations for sale at the temple door. Along the way he encounters a cast of characters worthy of a Fellini movie: a hopelessly vain faded beauty who resembles "a mummified wedding cake"; a prescient witch who reveals to him unnerving facts about his past; priests who drone endlessly before a throng of the devout who move humbly forward on their knees, in awe at the presence of the divine being they have come here to celebrate. The object of their devotion-and the goal of Eryk's search-is the Virgin herself, whose image is mysteriously imprinted on the renowned tilma, the simple peasant's cloak once worn by Juan Diego, which has survived intact through many centuries, by some process which science is helpless to explain. We soon perceive that Eryk comes equipped for his adventure with the three requisites for the authentic spiritual voyager: a pure heart, an honest eye, and a willingness to be open to the unexpected, in whatever form. What he discovers delights and perplexes, as his odyssey unfolds at ever deeper levels of Mystery and contradiction. This work is part travelogue, part historical narrative, and part spiritual exploration. In a bravura performance, Eryk deftly fuses the levels and achieves a truly remarkable revelation of the archetypal search set within the banal realities of the modern world. Mexico City is ever present in brilliant evocation, with its constant stream of hallucinatory images and bizarre figures, as if point out the pervasive spiritual grotesquerie which characterizes of our times. Yet, this same city harbors the miraculous image imprinted on the tilma, visible proof that the transcendent flouishes within the material realms. Eryk yearns to experience the numinous through authentic connection with sacred reality, the ultimate divine feminine. The challenges he faces are those which traditionally confront all such pilgrims, and indeed, together they comprise an allegory of the ills which beset modern society itself, and prevent us from claiming our rightful spiritual heritage. He must literally wade through the sea of hawkers and clamorous purveyors of spiritual tinsel to enter the cathedral (our obsession with materialism which distracts from spiritual progress?) Inside, he encounters the hierarchy, the male representatives of the establishment so reminiscent of our own omnipresent authority figures, who care little about the actual experience of the seekers before them, as long as their own power of control is not challenged. And elsewhere, he meets a cuandera, a witch/healer with apparent supernatural powers who offers some striking evidence of secret gifts, but who also relies on blatant superstition for many of her ritualistic practices. Like many today, Hanut is both drawn to and skeptical of such emissaries of the occult, a realm which often proves to be a deceptive path. Each of these obstacles is presented in telling precision, acutely and stunningly drawn. Indeed, Hanut's capacity for description is a rare gift. In all, this book is a brilliant accomplishment-a bringing together of the many levels, a story told with an uncanny knack for revealing what is truly there, rather than offering the idealized picture a naïve journeyer might suppose. It is Pilgrim's Progress and Fellini, Dante and Flannery O'Connor, the hero and the comic foil all in one superb, entertaining, enlightening package. And, in the end, he gets his reward. Finally, after the crowds have departed, after the souvenir sellers have closed their shops, he and Andrew are admitted to the old cathedral, where renovation is taking place. Now, away from the meaningless hubbub of the exterior world and the false rituals of the official sanctuary, in a state resembling that of Juan Diego, the simple peasant who opened his heart to the original vision of Guadalupe on a barren hillside, Eryk discovers at last the essence he has come to find-the Sacred Feminine, real, vibrant, as powerful as ever, the one who triumphs over all the foibles and follies of a deficient humanity to confirm the immeasurable divine reality which underlies and motivates the entire universe of perceived things. It is here, in this unpretentious setting, that she acknowledges his presence, and extends to him the grace of acceptance which he has longed for. Indeed, she is "the goddess who did not leave," but remains to console and nurture her children as the Divine Mother of all. The Road to Guadalupe is a rich feast for the soul. a compendium of marvelous sketches revealing a culture which, like our own, yearns for connection, yet too often is lost in the maze of the irrelevant and the misleading. It is an enthralling and entertaining book, filled with both wisdom and wit in a rare combination. It is a treasure, a valuable contribution to an age filled with seekers desperately striving to rediscovery the lost link with spirit.
Rating:  Summary: A walk with the Mother of God. Review: The Virgin of Guadalupe and her apparitions are a fascinating phenomenon. "The Road to Guadalupe" is a handbook for the seeker and a wonderful companion for our daily walk with "La Madre". Even if I sometimes disagreed (with a grin) with Hanut's humorous take on the catholic church, I admire his profound insight,confessed spiritual 'faux pas'and his tenacity in search for the truth. This book is also a tribute to all the 'real' pilgrims in the world for whom the word 'courage' is the key.
Rating:  Summary: A BEAUTIFUL INVOCATION Review: This astonishing book is destined to become a classic!The overall impression one gets from reading "The Road to Guadalupe"is of affirmation and power; In a down-to-earth accessible manner, eryk Hanut introduces us to an immense spectrum of situations, scenes and vignettes, and his world bursts with passion, humor, tragedy and wisdom.Eryk's voice is a voice for our time. I salute him. Diane.
Rating:  Summary: Simply a beautiful book! Review: This beautiful book might be compared to a El Greco portrait, filled with somber shadows and radiant light effects.I couldn't put it down. Excellent travel and spiritual book.
Rating:  Summary: GREAT BOOK/GREAT READ/WONDERFUL!!! Review: This book is a brilliant work; It's wry, hilarious, sometimes emotionally blistering but always luminous;I like its unflinchingly honest tone and I can't wait for the next one; Eryk Hanut's testimony is priceless.
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