Elizabeth Gilbert's memoir Eat, Pray, Love, published on February 16, 2006, has sold over 18 million copies worldwide. The book, which chronicles the author's year-long journey through Italy, India, and Indonesia after her divorce, has been translated into more than 30 languages and adapted into a film starring Julia Roberts. Its enduring appeal continues to spark discussions on personal growth and cultural critiques.
On February 16, 2006, Eat, Pray, Love hit bookstore shelves, offering readers a glimpse into Elizabeth Gilbert's search for meaning following her divorce. The memoir details her adventures in Italy focused on pleasure, India on spirituality, and Indonesia on balance, blending personal reflection with travelogue elements.
Over two decades, the book has achieved remarkable success, selling more than 18 million copies and reaching audiences in over 30 languages. It elevated Gilbert to celebrity author status and prompted many readers to embark on their own transformative trips. The story's structure, with a clear three-act progression and concise chapters of three to four pages each, contributes to its accessible, engaging read.
Critics have noted both its relatability and limitations. A 2010 review in Bitch magazine introduced the term 'priv-lit' to critique narratives like Gilbert's, which emphasize enlightenment through experiences often enabled by financial privilege. Social media reflects this divide, with users sharing fond memories alongside humorous takes on midlife reinvention.
In the preface to the 2016 10th anniversary edition, Gilbert poses timeless questions: 'Who am I? Who does my life belong to? What is my relationship to divinity? What have I come here to do? Do I have the right to change my own path?' These themes resonate amid shifting societal expectations for women, particularly around divorce and self-discovery.
Rebecca Saletan, Vice President and Editorial Director at Riverhead Books, who has edited Gilbert's nonfiction since 2015, attributes the book's impact to its universal appeal. 'There’s not a reader alive who does not identify with both the dilemma of being at a stuck point in life — even when you’ve gotten what you thought you wanted — and with the fantasy of getting to run away from it all and explore your fondest dreams, no matter how supposedly impractical,' Saletan said. She praised Gilbert's voice as 'real, confiding, self-knowing, often hilarious — like your best version of your best friend.'
Eat, Pray, Love also reshaped the memoir genre, popularizing 'stunt memoirs' that combine personal challenges with imparted wisdom. It influenced works such as Gretchen Rubin’s The Happiness Project in 2009, Cheryl Strayed’s Wild in 2012, and Shonda Rhimes’s Year of Yes in 2015. In 2016, Gilbert contributed an introduction to the anthology Eat, Pray, Love Made Me Do It, featuring stories inspired by her book.
Publishers continue to reference it in deals; a Publishers Marketplace search reveals 36 memoir and fiction comparisons over the past 20 years, including one announced on January 26, 2026. Saletan highlighted Gilbert's rigorous process: 'Liz’s not-so-secret secret is that she works like a demon and metabolizes editorial feedback with incredible openness, even when it touches on very personal material.'
Despite some dated elements, the memoir endures as a tale of reinvention, blending escape with insights on meditation and inner peace.