Now’s your chance to start your summer road trip (even if it’s just by being submerged in a hot summer read) — and win great prizes. Join our 2013 Summer Reading Challenge! Are you up for the challenge? Make this your summer reading list, read each book, share your reviews, get to know the authors and enter to win weekly prizes. The challenge kicks off today and will go through mid-August. Join the event on Facebook for more information!
Keep an eye out during the challenge for bonus picks to earn more points towards the prizes. The more you read and the more you share, the more you win. Happy reading!
Without further adieu, here is stop #7 in the summer reading challenge, Where in the OM Am I? by Sara DiVello.
More about Where in the OM Am I? by Sara DiVello.
Setting: We’ll “pahk the cah” and stretch our legs by walking the historic 2.5 mile Freedom Trail. A Swan Boat Tour around Boston Public Garden will be a welcome respite before catching a Sox game at Fenway Park.
Plot: A hilarious, heartfelt and entertaining narrative non-fiction chronicling Sara’s journey from the fast-paced, cut-throat corporate world to the slow-living, cut-throat yoga world … and the vast universe in between …
Here’s what people are saying about Where in the OM am I?:
- The Devil Wears Prada meets Eat, Pray, Love in this engaging, inspiring tale of self-discovery. DiVello blends keen cultural observation with a terrifically wry wit as she balances her soul-killing corporate career with the world of New Age poseurs…A great read for anyone who has ever sat in a cubicle, dreaming of escape –Kathleen Flinn, New York Times best-selling author of The Sharper Your Knife, the Less You Cry
- “When Sara DiVello tries to fold a yoga practice into her miserable, mirthless corporate career, she realizes even the so-called enlightened aren’t immune to back-stabbing bitchery. Raw, real and at times deeply, darkly funny, Where in the OM Am I? shows you a side of yoga you may not have known existed. If you think your job sucks, this book will be more welcome than an extra-long corpse pose at the end of a grueling class.” –Jenna McCarthy, Author of If It Was Easy They’d Call the Whole Damn Thing a Honeymoon.
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