Geography of Bliss
To pamper himself and research The Geography of Bliss, self-admitted grump Eric Weiner traveled the world in search of happiness. At each stop, this indefatigable NPR correspondent encounters people finding or not finding satisfaction in unexpected ways. Weiner maintains a light tone, but he does...
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To pamper himself and research The Geography of Bliss, self-admitted grump Eric Weiner traveled the world in search of happiness. At each stop, this indefatigable NPR correspondent encounters people finding or not finding satisfaction in unexpected ways. Weiner maintains a light tone, but he does pose some provocative questions: Are political freedoms or economic prosperity really that importance for happiness? Can relative ignorance be bliss? Are some cultures more predisposed to happiness than others?
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Format: ebook
ISBN:
9780446511070 (0446511072)
Publish date: January 1st 2008
Publisher: Grand Central Publishing
Pages no: 283
Edition language: English
Category:
Non Fiction,
Travel,
Humor,
Autobiography,
Memoir,
Book Club,
Adult,
Culture,
Philosophy,
Sociology,
Psychology
Yawn. While there are some good bits in this book it reads more like some sort of stream-of-consciousness retelling of a couple holidays paired with whatever anecdotes the author happened to remember while writing. Not my cup of tea (and actually not quite unlike Three Cups of Tea when you think abo...
I liked it okay as a travel memoir, but not as a study of happiness. For me, the problem was mostly tone--it was hard for me to get beneath the layers of snarkiness to see any kind of earnest search for happiness. Eric Weiner was prone to over-generalizations and sarcastic take-downs, which would pu...
An interesting concept around what makes people happy: Switzerland has happy folks, Moldova, well not so much. Weiner discovers that maybe it is because when life is predictable and there are societal rules to follow in your country, life is better. It makes sense. I want to know that corruption isn...
Weiner was a decent narrator and though it seemed like he found a good way to go to countries he wanted to visit (except perhaps for Moldova) - he never did go to Denmark. It was an entertaining travelogue with no particularly unexpected insights into happiness.
I'd probably give this book 3.5 stars. I really enjoyed The Geography of Bliss, especially the first half of the book. The first half had some interesting insights, profound ponderings, and neat facts/trivia about the places visited. The later parts of the book, though, seemed to lose some steam, im...