Eat, Pray, Live.

Posted on February 2009   Page 2 of 7
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That drive fueled her early writing career, before she crashed and burned over a man. Which then led to her trip, which led to her memoir, which led to the sudden wealth, fame, and cult of Liz, which has all landed her in …
 
Frenchtown? Swimming holes? In a dinky river village where she can walk down a hill from her house into town, say howdy to every stray boy in oversize swim trunks, grab her cappuccino, and check out the plodding old Delaware? This is the next leg of her story?
 
Yup. Liz landed here two years ago — just as the EPL phenomenon hit — to open a shop that sells exotic stuff she and her husband have collected from their travels all over: Buddhas, handmade canoes, teak back-scratchers, impossible-to-play musical instruments. (And yes, EPL devotees, the husband is Felipe — his real name is José — the courtly Brazilian she met in Bali whose parting of his bed’s mosquito net ended her two-year celibacy.)
 
Frenchtown? Absolutely. It’s her home. The place where Liz Gilbert is now quietly cooking up her next — and entirely ­different — act.
 

THE PATH TO Frenchtown was laid a long, long time ago, from Liz’s start as a writer. Two decades ago, at 22, just out of NYU, she was going to be the real thing, a writer. One who goes out into the world and meets characters and does exotic things and knocks the shit out of it, like Tom Wolfe or Cormac McCarthy. So she headed West with her pencils and notebooks, to a Wyoming dude ranch, to hang out with cowboys.
 
Here’s where things immediately started to get a little tangled up. Because she decided, for a moment there, that she was gonna be not only a writer, but a professional cowgirl, too. She laughs about it now. (“A fantastic act of fraudulence and performance,” she says.) She’s made fun of herself in print over her foolishness, how she went riding with a cowboy named Hank, who was a drunk and belligerent and couldn’t get out a declarative sentence without cursing. Of course, she adored him.
 
Hank told her, “You’re a really good rider, you know.” Really? Oh, that was the best compliment Liz had ever received. “It’s true,” he went on. “I wish I could express myself the way you do.”

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User Comments:

Cheers To The Destruction of a Home!
Posted by Anonymous | Jul. 1, 2011 at 8:40 AM
COMMENT:
To be heralded as a hero by women everywhere for “setting forest fires” is quite profound. To scrape the surface of the meaning of life and love and author a story that leads others to believe they have made the same mistakes you have seems a little reckless, but then again it poetry from so many of our souls! There is beauty/love in so much around us that we often can’t see the forest through the trees. It takes a story like this to remind us how empty we think we are in-between moments of enlightenment and causes us to betray wisdom. As I reflect on this book, I can’t help but wonder about all the bystanders that have been caught in the wake of this delusion. How has the sanctity of marriage and the morals of this generation been improved by this testament? It makes me sad to think so many people ask how we got to live in a world like this, knowing we have mental images painted as beautifully as this influencing our thoughts. I wish the author of this article would have asked if feel fulfilled and complete now. Why is...
 
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