Soulmate: A Novel of Eternal Love by Deepak Chopra

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However, my personal preference will be to keep his non-fiction work on my bookshelf. In SOUL MATE Chopra twists a Medical Doctor's psychiatric practice into his personal love relationships and all the characters change in the process. Published by Putnam, 2001, 290 pages, ISBN: 0-399-14798-5. Not that he could embrace it. The girl raised her eyebrows.

In SOUL MATE Chopra twists a Medical Doctor's psychiatric practice into his personal love relationships and all the characters change in the process. Change and the struggles against change seems to be a constant theme. Spiritual elements hover on the extremities of an otherwise secular and pragmatic story looking at multi-dimensional liaisons. I highly recommend this book. Published by Putnam, 2001, 290 pages, ISBN: 0-399-14798-5. I chose to review this book because I've been a fan of the mind-body-spirit leader and author Deepak Chopra. I had the pleasure of attending an event featuring him at the Unity Church in Dallas, TX. Chopra had a charismatic stage presence, and a message of healing that riveted the audience. The main character of the book is a New York City doctor named Raj who is doing an internship in psychiatry. His days are full, yet he feels empty. Unable to resuscitate it, she ditches and runs. If a Broadway actress indeed owns a car most NYC residents don't even drive the vehicle would be a more reliable ride than the jalopy he describes. Thus, the knight Raj rescues the damsel in distress Molly which in my opinion is a cliché rendered in fairy tales. Raj has an affair with Molly, which causes him to question the meaning of love. Chopra offers bits of his ubiquitous wisdom as the love story progresses, making the entire book worthwhile. You seek detachment not so that nothing can touch you, but so that you have enough space to find out what is real. I really believe that. I would recommend any book written by Deepak Chopra. He has filled a void in our society by teaching us about health and healing, peace and love. However, my personal preference will be to keep his non-fiction work on my bookshelf. Tolson First I congratulate Mr. Chopra on writing this piece for the fiction genre. This was a really good book. I have to admit thought, that the true essence of it may be lost to the average reader, unless they are farmiliar with Chopra's philosophies and not just his on the mind-body connection, consciousness and of course, Love! It's not the usual romance... He touches on love and death and life as it really is, as it should be. Each of us is a spark of divinity, a link to the other, a part of a whole called consciousness. Chopra merged it all into fictional characters and characterization. It's a lovely story of love... This is Deepak's second try with fiction. I am just not sure why I like it. I would recommend it to anybody who has done trainings with Deepak. Or for those who are fascinated by this teachings. And, boy, he is a very good teacher. This book will help you in learning more and deeper. As a learning tool this is effective. I am not sure. I like his entertainment efforts in poetry and music much better. The story is revealed in some other reviews, so I leave it right here and now: Good foor students and Deepak-fans,... Go out and buy his CD with Dave Stewart though. Deepak Chopra has been making inroads in the fiction field for several years, and this is his best novel to date. Its theme is definitely inspiring and New Age, a love story that brings two people together, only to separate them after the heroine dies suddenly. The first part of Soulmate is about the romance between Raj, a young doctor in New York, and Molly, an actress he meets on the subway. The second, more metaphysical part of the story, takes place after Molly's death when she apparently returns to tell Raj about the true meaning of love and death. I found the style very readable, a real page turner. But the most enjoyable part was to hear Deepak discuss the great question of how love survives death. This is a story of personal redemption that really touches the reader. I was looking forward to a great lesson about love, attraction and respect but surprisingly it gives lame excuses for cheating in two situations like people haven't got enough excuses by themselves. Submissive behavior on the part of the cheated one is predominant as well. It depicts the psychiatric profession in the USA as completely disinterested in its patients improvement, which I don't know to what extent is true. Other than that, it is a good story about inspiration and being open to new ideas and approaches.

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