After enjoying "the man who wanted to be happy" and (slightly less) "the gods always travel incognito," I was eager to read his latest novel. And I must say I'm disappointed. The abstract yet inviting but, from the beginning, we feel that we will fall back into the same pattern as the previous novels, a man who challenges facing a kind of "guru". What I did not an issue in his second novel, but this faith will, discussions with Aunt Margie, the "guru" of this book, seem very "cliché" and the plot is still a bit light: one guess the end from the first chapters. So sure, there is a path to the end but it matters little in the end leaves the impression that the author always has a delay time, we guess this before it happens.
You learn things, but it certainly did not give me new ideas and ways of thinking as his first novel. If you are looking for a "novel of psychology and personal development," I advise you "the man who wanted to be happy" that should make you see things differently.