At the end of her bestselling memoir Eat, Pray, Love, Elizabeth Gilbert fell in love with Felipe, a Brazilian-born man of Australian citizenship who’d been living in Indonesia when they met. Resettling in America, the couple swore eternal fidelity to each other, but also swore to never, ever, under any circumstances get legally married. (Both were survivors of previous horrific divorces. Enough said.) But providence intervened one day in the form of the United States government, which—after unexpectedly detaining Felipe at an American border crossing—gave the couple a choice: they could either get married, or Felipe would never be allowed to enter the country again. Having been effectively sentenced to wed, Gilbert tackled her fears of marriage by delving into this topic completely, trying with all her might to discover through historical research, interviews, and much personal reflection what this stubbornly enduring old institution actually is. Told with Gilbert’s trademark wit, intelligence and compassion, Committed attempts to “turn on all the lights” when it comes to matrimony, frankly examining questions of compatibility, infatuation, fidelity, family tradition, social expectations, divorce risks and humbling responsibilities. Gilbert’s memoir is ultimately a clear-eyed celebration of love with all the complexity and consequence that real love, in the real world, actually entails.
Elizabeth Gilbert is an award-winning writer of both fiction and non-fiction. Her short story collection Pilgrims was a finalist for the PEN/Hemingway award, and her novel Stern Men was a New York Times notable book. In 2002, she published The Last American Man, which was a finalist for both the National Book Award and the National Book Critic’s Circle Award. She is best known for her 2006 memoir Eat, Pray, Love, which was published in more than thirty languages.
This is the second book I've read from Liz Gilbert. Apparently this one is not as riveting as her phenomenal best-seller e.p.l. but still it's worth the reading. I was most impressed by the consciousness behind each and every word Gilbert wrote in const...
评分有一类作家,他们的作品质量与其个人经历的痛苦程度成正比,很可惜地, Elizabeth正是其中之一。 从个人角度来说,我真诚祝福她度过了可能是一生中最痛苦的一个时期。 从读者角度来说,我遗憾地估计上一部作品可能就是她这辈子最成功的一本了。 这本书和上一本Eat, Pray, Lov...
评分This is the second book I've read from Liz Gilbert. Apparently this one is not as riveting as her phenomenal best-seller e.p.l. but still it's worth the reading. I was most impressed by the consciousness behind each and every word Gilbert wrote in const...
评分有一类作家,他们的作品质量与其个人经历的痛苦程度成正比,很可惜地, Elizabeth正是其中之一。 从个人角度来说,我真诚祝福她度过了可能是一生中最痛苦的一个时期。 从读者角度来说,我遗憾地估计上一部作品可能就是她这辈子最成功的一本了。 这本书和上一本Eat, Pray, Lov...
评分This is the second book I've read from Liz Gilbert. Apparently this one is not as riveting as her phenomenal best-seller e.p.l. but still it's worth the reading. I was most impressed by the consciousness behind each and every word Gilbert wrote in const...
这本书的阅读体验是沉浸式的,它仿佛不是作者写给我们看的,而是作者在用一种近乎诗意的语言,引导我们进行一场深刻的自我反省之旅。作者的遣词造句极其讲究,很多句子单独拎出来都可以成为座右铭。它探讨的不是简单地“要做一个守信的人”,而是深入到“为什么我们要感到有义务去守信”的根源问题上。书中关于“未来自我”与“当下自我”之间博弈的论述,让我深受触动。我们许诺时,往往是以当下最乐观、最坚定的自我为基准,却低估了未来那个可能疲惫、可能动摇的“他者”。作者提出的“预先设立退出机制”的策略,非常务实和具有操作性,它将承诺从一个沉重的枷锁,变成了一个可控的风险管理工具。这使得全书既有哲学的深度,又具备了极强的实用价值。对于那些在职业生涯中或家庭生活中,时常感到被自己过去的决定所捆绑的人来说,这本书提供了一种优雅且有力的解脱之道。
评分这本关于个人承诺与自我实现的书,读起来就像是经历了一场深刻的内心对话。作者以一种极其真诚和毫不保留的方式,剖析了我们在生活、工作乃至人际关系中,那些许下诺言的瞬间与随之而来的挣扎。我尤其欣赏其中对于“不完美承诺”的探讨,它挑战了我们传统观念中对“说到做到”的僵化理解,指出真正的承诺并非一劳永逸的宣言,而是一个动态的、需要不断调整和维护的过程。书中引用了大量的真实案例,有些是关于事业上的重大抉择,有些则是日常生活中微小的坚持,这些故事让抽象的哲学讨论变得有血有肉。比如,作者描述了一个艺术家如何在灵感枯竭时,依然选择每天坐在画架前,即使什么都没画出来,这种近乎仪式感的坚持,比完成一幅杰作更具力量。全书的叙事节奏把握得非常好,它既有对宏大人生哲学的思辨,也有对具体行动步骤的指导,不落俗套,引人深思。它不是一本教你如何成功的心灵鸡汤,更像是一面镜子,照出我们内心深处对“可靠”的渴望和恐惧。读完后,我感觉自己对那些曾经轻易许下却又悄然遗忘的约定,有了一种新的敬畏感。
评分老实讲,起初我对这类探讨个人哲学的书籍抱有一丝怀疑,总觉得它们难免会陷入空泛的说教。然而,这本作品彻底颠覆了我的预期。它最引人注目的地方在于其批判性的视角,它没有一味歌颂“信守承诺”的美德,而是勇敢地去解构了那些建立在错误基础上的承诺,探讨了“何时放手”比“何时坚持”更为重要的伦理困境。作者毫不留情地揭示了那些以承诺为名的控制与束缚,让人感到醍醐灌顶。书中对于“情境伦理”在承诺中的应用讨论尤其精彩,它提醒我们,任何决定都必须放在特定的时间和环境下考量,没有绝对的对错。我发现,书中的某些观点甚至有些颠覆性,比如它建议在某些情况下,快速、坦诚地承认自己无法履行承诺,反而是对对方更大的尊重。这种对传统观念的挑战,让这本书的价值得到了质的提升,它提供了一种更加灵活、更富有人文关怀的处世之道。
评分我必须说,这本书的结构设计非常巧妙,它不像传统理论书籍那样枯燥乏味,反而更像是一部编年史,记录了一个人从懵懂到成熟过程中,对“信守”这一品质的理解迭代。作者以时间线索为脉络,展现了社会环境、个人心智变化如何影响我们对承诺的看法。比如,书中对比了青少年时期那种冲动型、基于情感的承诺,与成年后基于后果考量的、更加审慎的承诺之间的巨大差异。这种对比非常鲜明有力。我特别喜欢其中穿插的那些小小的、几乎被我们忽略的文化符号对承诺的影响,比如某个特定的手势、一句老话等等,这些细节的捕捉,显示出作者非凡的观察力。虽然全书主题深刻,但阅读起来却并不晦涩,作者很擅长用生动的生活场景来佐证观点。比如,他用两个邻居关于共享工具的口头约定,最终如何演变成一场社区信任危机的案例,直击人心。读到最后,我感觉自己不仅在读一本关于承诺的书,更像是在阅读一本关于如何建立和维持健康人际关系的指南。
评分这本书的文笔简直是一股清流,阅读体验堪比品鉴一壶陈年的老茶,回味悠长,层次分明。作者的语言功力非凡,他巧妙地将心理学、社会学甚至一点点存在主义的思考,编织进他对“投入”这一概念的解读之中。最让我惊艳的是其中关于“情感债务”的章节,它深入剖析了当我们无法履行承诺时,对彼此情感账户造成的隐性透支。我仿佛能听到那些未竟之言在空气中震颤的声响。作者没有采用那种居高临下的说教口吻,而是像一位经验丰富的朋友,拉着你一起梳理那些复杂纠缠的动机。他坦诚地展示了人性中软弱的一面,比如在压力山大时倾向于逃避责任的本能反应,但这恰恰增强了全书的可信度和代入感。书中的论证逻辑链条严密,每一步的推进都像是精密仪器在运作,让你无法找到反驳的空隙,只能心悦诚服地接受其观点。对于那些热衷于深度思考和对生活本质有探究欲的读者来说,这本书无疑是一次智力上的盛宴。它迫使我重新审视自己对“责任”二字的定义,远远超出了合同条款或口头约定范畴。
评分A must before finally stepping into matrimony.
评分a woman's inward search into the deep Self
评分it's good to find another being like me
评分#Not a fan of Eat Pray Love to begin with, but I like her writing style, so there you go.
评分#Not a fan of Eat Pray Love to begin with, but I like her writing style, so there you go.
本站所有内容均为互联网搜索引擎提供的公开搜索信息,本站不存储任何数据与内容,任何内容与数据均与本站无关,如有需要请联系相关搜索引擎包括但不限于百度,google,bing,sogou 等
© 2026 onlinetoolsland.com All Rights Reserved. 本本书屋 版权所有