opfhealthcare.blogg.se

Help Thanks Wow by Anne Lamott
Help Thanks Wow by Anne Lamott













Here's why: she is brutally honest, unpretentious and doesn't pretend that she has it all together. I have a few friends who don't like Anne Lamott. But regarding this book, I can't share that same praise. I really have enjoyed Anne's books and have found her story to be inspiring. I must confess, I am sad to write this review. But don't plan on going back to them for later inspiration. Sure, they can be amusing or you may find yourself relating to her experiences.

Help Thanks Wow by Anne Lamott

(Perhaps, much like my review.) To get a sense of the writing in Help, Thanks, Wow, read her Facebook posts. Rather, it left me with the feeling that she was rambling. Her writing style was not the same quality as is found in her other books. Third, I found reading the book to be much like reading Anne Lamott's latest posts on Facebook. Unless one is rather new to spirituality, most of the material in this book is a narrative repackaging of the much larger themes common to many world religions - Christianity, Judaism, Buddhism, etc. While there are some good ideas in Help, Thanks, Wow - they are not terribly radical or new. Second, the book really did not strike me as being profound or even notable. And I am not even sure if it was worth being made into a hard cover. Now that I have, I must say that I am disappointed.įirst, the book is way too expensive for the length that it is. I've been looking forward to reading this book for some weeks. I am a tremendous admirer of Anne Lamott and her many books. Clarity and wisdom, humility and hope-all from one little book. That said, though elegant and wise, this book is still a trifle: "Help" is better than "Thanks," "Thanks" is better than "Wow," and the brief concluding essay is inferior to the other three.

Help Thanks Wow by Anne Lamott

the prose with which she describes her life is so elegant-so sleek in its zen concentration, so studded with remarkable phrases-that we fear she has moved far beyond us, and feel humbled when faced with her clarity and wisdom. Lamott is so frank about sharing her brokenness, all the fragments of her crazy hippie life, that we hope we too-if we had half her courage-could reap the rewards of prayer at least as bountifully as she. I have read two previous books on spirituality by Lamott, both longer and better than this one, but they all have the same qualities. This slim book consists of three essays on spirituality, each exploring a different type of prayer: petition ("Help!"), thanksgiving ("Thanks!") and ("Wow!), which I feel can best be described as prayer in praise of the sublime.















Help Thanks Wow by Anne Lamott