This book took me nearly 3 years to complete. I charged into it having no clue the material would be so dense and difficult to comprehend. I made it about 20 pages before setting it aside for easier to consume books. I'd pick it back up every 6 months and digest another serving.
As for the actual review of the book, many say it could be condensed, and perhaps, for them, it could be. For me, I was better able to understand his point from hearing it said many different ways, and from different angles. Sure, the idea that love is the answer to all can be a bit annoying...but here's what really made me think:
Krishnamurti points out that nearly all of our existence consists of a set of relations - our brains process the stimulation of the external world into RELATIONSHIPS with our selves and everything else in order to UNDERSTAND and make sense of the world. This separation or division of reality creates our sense of SELF. In this process of analyzing and compartmentalizing our relationships with people, things, ideas, etc, we kill the ability to actually BE in the MOMENT with these entities and see them for what they TRULY are.
That's the entire premise of the book: we create images (which are immediately outdated) of the thing which we are related and we place our expectations upon them. This leads to much conflict and suffering once our expectations are not met. The book is mainly a collection of talks/blurbs that take this idea and apply it to the wonderful world of sex and personal relationships.
I sat on this for a while, because I couldn't really understand how to get away from this form of relating. I guess the goal isn't perfection, but living IN the MOMENT as much as we CAN. Ie. being present/mindful. For me, that's really freaking hard. It's SO easy to get caught up in the daily humdrum.
I enjoyed this book because it made my brain hurt attempting to reassess my fundamental process for interpreting the world. Whoa