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Book Reviews of The Witch of Portobello

The Witch of Portobello
The Witch of Portobello
Author: Paulo Coelho, Margaret Jull Costa (Translator)
ISBN-13: 9780061338816
ISBN-10: 0061338818
Publication Date: 2/1/2008
Pages: 304
Rating:
  • Currently 3.2/5 Stars.
 108

3.2 stars, based on 108 ratings
Publisher: Harper Perennial
Book Type: Paperback
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

11 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

shootingstar985 avatar reviewed The Witch of Portobello on + 13 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 5
The story is engaging and the wording is exquisite at times, but it was a chore and ultimately, an annoyance, to read this book. I did not "like" many of the characters, especially the main ones. It was pounding you over the head with its excessive use of spiratulism/sacrifice,"mother" worship, etc.
reviewed The Witch of Portobello on + 1450 more book reviews
Spirituality! Many go to church seeking it. This book describes how one woman believe that Jesus meets this need where ever we are. The author achieves it by telling the story of Athena who seeks to discover herself. Abandoned as a child by her mother, a Romanian gypsy, she searches for her.

Narrators are those who knew her well and others not so well. âFrom the journalist who fell in love with her to the woman who felt betrayed by her, from birth mother to adoptive mother, from teacher to studentâ narrators describe how âAthena, born Sherine, sometimes called Hagia Sofiaâ affected their lives. Interviews are related as they were given. Some believed her a âwitchâ others a spiritual leader.

How does she view love, passion, joy and sacrifice? How do we? The author shares Athenaâs view. When the Catholic Church let her down she taught love and sacrifice to others one by one and group by group. Not a book to read quickly, the author suggests there is a feminine side to God, giving readers much to ponder and reflect upon.

This is not a biography. Rather it is a reflection on beliefs and how one lives life. It can be empowering, suggesting that the dogma and rigidity of religion should be examined in light of personal beliefs such as love and sacrifice. What is love? Love just IS.
reviewed The Witch of Portobello on
A very good "spiritual" read.
reviewed The Witch of Portobello on + 57 more book reviews
This is the best book of his so far and I have read all of them.
reviewed The Witch of Portobello on + 3 more book reviews
I liked this book better than The Alchemist. This storyline was engaging without being too "heady".
reviewed The Witch of Portobello on + 813 more book reviews
Athena, abandoned as a child, seeks her birth mother: a Romanian gypsy. In the vein of The Alchemist, this is another of is pseudo-religious psychological novels. He will bring you deeply into the realm of the "Great Mother", of the parochialism of racial and spiritual bias, and of the fanaticism of radical minorities.
reviewed The Witch of Portobello on
Coelho is a genius!
reviewed The Witch of Portobello on + 26 more book reviews
This book was okay. I'm still not sure what to think of it. It was a little to philosophical and wispy (for lack of a better term) for me at times... Despite that, the ending was really great.
chaclaw avatar reviewed The Witch of Portobello on + 22 more book reviews
I did not enjoy reading this as I found it to be a bit silly. Loaded with loosely connected New Age jargon, dripping with a very vague sort of semi-philosophy about something or other -- Hey, somebody must have liked it, but I do not plan to read this author again.
reviewed The Witch of Portobello on
Pulo Coelho does it again!
reviewed The Witch of Portobello on + 276 more book reviews
A grown up story sometimes beautifully composed. Well worth reading.