The Celestine Prophecy, or Old Socialism for a New Age

The success of The Celestine Prophecy proves there's always money to be made by telling people exactly what they want to hear. Although the book claims to be "an adventure" about the coming spiritual revolution in world consciousness, its meandering story is merely a pretext to link a series of didactic dialogues and "feel-good" predictions for the near future. In its slick packaging, the book serves as a sort of tabloid psychic for the "smart set."

I first learned of James Redfield's New Age novel in 1994 when a producer recommended it to me. I next heard it praised by a casting agent on her voice mail recording. The Hollywood Reporter reported that Cathy Lee Crosby was trying to option its film rights. When I finally got around to reading it on the New York set of The Money Train, six different women approached me to admire my taste. Curiously, all praise has come from women. Men could only comment that they heard good things about it — from wives and girlfriends. Whatever its faults, the book appears to be a chick magnet.

The Celestine Prophecy's plot is a paint-by-number utopian potboiler. An Outsider enters a Utopian Society in which he learns New Things about human interrelations. (Sharing, caring, and a clean environment are healthful for children and other living things. Greed, competition, and Western patriarchy are sickening the planet.) The Outsider is Skeptical at first, but the Utopia is filled with Beautiful And Compassionate People who explain their world to him with Tolerance And Understanding. Left free to decide for himself, the Outsider's Mind comes to realize what his wiser Feelings have all along intuited: that this New Society is the inevitable Wave Of History. He has seen The Future, and knows that it is a Good Thing.

In The Celestine Prophecy, the Outsider is a yuppie who is vaguely dissatisfied with his successful life. Something is missing. He coincidentally meets an old flame — a beautiful, liberated, thirtysomething yuppette — who tells him of an ancient manuscript of Nine Insights found in the rain forests of Peru. (Where else, but a rain forest?) She only knows the First Insight, and it concerns coincidences.

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Article Author: Thomas M. Sipos


Thomas M. Sipos is the author of the anti-Communist satire, Vampire Nation and Manhattan Sharks. Some of his essays on horror film aesthetics appear in his horror collection, Halloween Candy. He founded the Tabloid Witch Awards horror film contest and festival. …

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  • 1 - Sarah eg.

    Nov 09, 2002 at 2:11 am

    A beautiful, incredible and amazing review! Funny as heck, too. Thanks for the spiritual insights.

  • 2 - Chari

    Nov 19, 2002 at 2:44 pm

    Hysterical review.

  • 3 - CD

    Jun 13, 2003 at 12:23 pm

    Great review. I'm an archaeologist working in the Andes so I've had a bunch of people recommend this book to me. Now I have a general idea of what I'm up against. I'm going to go read it now (at a local New Age bookshop; I can't bring myself to buy it) to see in detail how Redfield's view of Peru's present and prehistory compares to mine.

  • 4 - Darchangels

    Oct 22, 2003 at 6:55 pm

    Its time to deconstruct the new age myth

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