Grace [Eventually]: Thoughts on Faith
by Anne Lamottpublished
March 20th 2007
(first published 2008)
by Riverhead Hardcover
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binding
Hardcover, 272 pages
isbn
1594489424
(isbn13: 9781594489426)
description
More thoughts on faith. Continued from Traveling Mercies and Plan B.
Through Anne Lamott's many books (including six novels, her bestselling parent...more
Through Anne Lamott's many books (including six novels, her bestselling parent...more
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avg 3.80
bookshelves:
non-fiction
Read in August, 2007
recommends it for:
wouldn't recommend
My love affair with Anne Lammot started many years ago with her book Traveling Mercies. It was raw and inviting and I was quickly drawn into her story-the story of a woman openly displaying her mess and how Jesus came into her life and how her life as a mess with Jesus continued. There was no way around the fact that she was a great writer. Yes, each turn of phrase also brought a possible offense, but atleast she kept you on your toes, thinking. Whenever I recommended her I would say "We...more
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bookshelves:
activism,
coming-of-age,
evangelical-angst,
grief,
social-commentary,
vignettes
Read in May, 2007
Annie, we need to talk.
First of all, why do you keep telling the same stories and quips over and over, repeating yourself like a demented party guest? Remember Jesus drinking gin straight out of the cat dish? Let's get back to that type of hilarious creativity. But let us never speak of Jesus as a 13 year old punk again. It was funny the first time in Plan B. When you brought it up in this very next book, verbatim, I physically cringed.
Also, nature is lovely and healing and all, ...more
First of all, why do you keep telling the same stories and quips over and over, repeating yourself like a demented party guest? Remember Jesus drinking gin straight out of the cat dish? Let's get back to that type of hilarious creativity. But let us never speak of Jesus as a 13 year old punk again. It was funny the first time in Plan B. When you brought it up in this very next book, verbatim, I physically cringed.
Also, nature is lovely and healing and all, ...more
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Read in August, 2008
recommends it for:
Anne Lamott fans
I just became aware that there was an Anne Lamott book, a new one, that I haven't read yet. Old enough to be out in paperback. So I picked it up at the beach and read it in an afternoon/evening (finished at midnight).
I truly love Anne Lamott, and so I suppose I am willing to be more forgiving of this book, just like you overlook the faults of a family member because they're usually a lot of fun to be with. Anne Lamott is usually someone who keeps me in stitches, but I think I only manag...more
I truly love Anne Lamott, and so I suppose I am willing to be more forgiving of this book, just like you overlook the faults of a family member because they're usually a lot of fun to be with. Anne Lamott is usually someone who keeps me in stitches, but I think I only manag...more
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bookshelves:
spirituality
Read in March, 2008
Hmmmm. . .I noticed a lot of really negative reviews about this book by folks who are Anne Lamott fans. I did enjoy it and, yes, as other reviewers noted it is more of the same of what we were given in Traveling Mercies & Plan B, but I don't know that I would expect anything different from her.
The reviews that were negative sounded to me as if folks expected Lamott to reveal some sort of progressive "improvement" in her approach to life--instead she is honest about her daily s...more
The reviews that were negative sounded to me as if folks expected Lamott to reveal some sort of progressive "improvement" in her approach to life--instead she is honest about her daily s...more
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Read in December, 2007
I have been a die-hard Anne Lamott fan for the past 12+ years. Maybe this is a case of listening to your favorite album in high school over and over until you just can't hear it one more time. (Good God did I just type the word album?) I started this book and Lamott still writes with her great sarcastic wit, profound spirituality, and honesty intermixed with her parenting struggles, but this time, despite the many pieces of good spiritual advice I came across, I found myself shirking from rea...more
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Read in July, 2007
I found this book to be more of a therapeutic journal and less of a book that pertains to faith. Her style has always been quite different from other writers in her genre, yet I found this book to have little to do with 'grace.' If the author told you in the preface that she is a bad mother, struggles with relationships, and is passionate about politics you would've known what the book was about. I love this author so it is hard for me to say ... I don't recommend.
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Read in July, 2007
I keep reading Anne LaMott to reassure myself that my deep, dark aetheist soul can read about religion without wanting to throw something across the room. Kind of a hodge-podge of essays with the humility and confession we've come to expect but not exactly cohesive or anything, it has a slapped together feel. Whatever, after reading tales of her years of struggle, go on, make as much money as you can or want to Anne.
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Read in August, 2008
This was my first Anne Lamott book and I have to say that I have very mixed feelings about it. She is, at times, hilarious and then at other times, offensive....to me, that is. Because of my political views and doctrinal stance as a christian, I couldn't always agree with her sometimes left-winged liberalism....which definitely comes out. But, all in all, the book was entertaining and intriguing.
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bookshelves:
essays,
heal-the-world,
nonfiction
recommends it for: adults, mature teens
Read in October, 2008
recommended to Erin by:
H. Deckerrecommends it for: adults, mature teens
It took a while for me to get into the swing of this book. Partly, I think, because I read it entirely during lunch breaks. But mostly it was a little slow in the beginning because I was unfamiliar with Anne Lamont's personal history and style. In her teens and twenties she was a drug user and an alcoholic, and although she's been sober for more than twenty years now, she still talks in her essays about her early years...a little too cavalierly, in my opinion. Something about the way she alm...more
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Read in June, 2008
A friend had recommended Traveling Mercies: Some Thoughts on Faith, but my library didn't have it, so I checked this one out instead. I just couldn't get into it to save my life, and never finished it. Yeah a few things were funny..came even close to touching..but overall just not my cup of tea. Even offensive in parts. It seems like maybe she's trying too hard to relate to EVERYONE instead of just calming the hell down and telling her story. I wanted to send her a zanax.
Also, I didn'...more
Also, I didn'...more
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Read in June, 2008
I read this book in two days and maybe I should have paced myself because initially I began to feel overwhelmed with anxiety and fear, but her stories articulate so profoundly what fears I live with and she gives me courage to recognize and face them. I love her honestly. She gives me courage to be honest and bravely face my demons. I appreciate how realistic she is with grace. Because even though in my mind, I understand what grace means. On the other hand, it is entirely difficult to except. Y...more
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3 comments
bookshelves:
nonfiction,
spirituality
Every time I read one of Anne Lamott's books, I feel like we're having a conversation, she's sitting across the room being painfully honest, and I'm sitting there going, "YES! I know EXACTly what you mean!!!" Her books on faith strengthen my own and make me feel like I'm not alone in my own selfish humanity when it comes to God. She's honest about people she dislikes, honest about her own selfishness, honest about her past, honest about her everyday struggle to be a decent human bei...more
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bookshelves:
memoir,
nonfiction,
spirituality
Read in May, 2008
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
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bookshelves:
nonfiction,
spirituality-religion,
women
recommends it for:
anyone disenchanted with, or interested in, religion or spirituality
Grace (Eventually) is the third of Anne Lamott's books about her journey of faith. I first discovered Lamott years ago, before she was very well known, when my friend Mary lent me Operating Instructions: A Journal of My Son's First Year. I was struck by her raw honesty and beautiful writing. Not many mothers will admit to their desire to throw their newborn baby out the window (because he wouldn't stop crying)!
At first, I struggled to get into "Grace," but eventually it took hold ...more
At first, I struggled to get into "Grace," but eventually it took hold ...more
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Read in September, 2008
I have read all of Anne Lamott's nonfiction, and enjoy it all. I think that this one wasn't as "good" as her first two "thoughts on faith" books, but only in the sense that the thoughts on faith were less explicit this time around. At least, that was my impression, though it's been awhile since reading the first two so maybe they were like that too. In any case, since I had read the previous ones I knew a lot about her history with church and didn't need the background--bu...more
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bookshelves:
essays,
family,
memoirs,
religion
This is the newest book by Anne Lamott, whose spiky attitude combines reverence and irreverence, wicked humor and loving humility. Grace (Eventually): Thoughts on Faith tells of her many sins, including earlier alcoholism and drug use. Lamott became sober more than 20 years ago after she started attending a Presbyterian congregation in northern California where she’s a member.
Lamott finds grace in common experiences: She fights with her teenage son; she dances with disabled peopl...more
Lamott finds grace in common experiences: She fights with her teenage son; she dances with disabled peopl...more
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Read in June, 2007
This book literally kept me awake, but for all the wrong reasons. In this third volume of her “grace” series, Lamott has gone far enough down the path of complete, uncensored confessional self-disclosure that I, for one, don’t intend to follow her another step. There are things I just don’t need or want to know about both the drama and minutia of the author’s life.
That said, Lamott still seems to be at the peak of her powers when it comes to turning a phrase. Her command of imager...more
That said, Lamott still seems to be at the peak of her powers when it comes to turning a phrase. Her command of imager...more
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community,
non-fiction-essay
Read in January, 2007
Nothing quite compares to that first jolt, like a good cup of coffee in the morning, of reading Anne Lamott's book Traveling Mercies: Some Thoughts on Faith. Unfortunately this book doesn't deliver quite the same experience. Perhaps my expectations are too high. I found this collection of personal essays much less griping than her other "thoughts on faith" books. Maybe it was just my end of summer ...more
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Read in July, 2008
more of the same, witty, self-deprecating writing from anne lamott. this is only my second book by her. and i will admit i didn't love it nearly as much not as the first one i read, "thoughts on faith". some of the stories fell a little flat for me. but mostly it felt like sitting down with an old friend and catching up on her life. it's always refreshing to hear a writer be vulnerable and funny at the same time. to admit to her pettiness or bad moods. something about those confessions...more
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Read in March, 2007
I initially started reading this book for work to get a sense of what faith is and can be, particularly for our supporters. Turns out that a few pages in, I felt the author had some words of wisdom and humor for me too. I am not sure why this book made me feel so good, why it was so soothing for me, but here's just a glimpse of her style:
The best way to change the world is to change your mind, which often requires feeding yourself. It makes biochemical peace. It's almost like a prayer: to b...more
The best way to change the world is to change your mind, which often requires feeding yourself. It makes biochemical peace. It's almost like a prayer: to b...more
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