To celebrate her 50th birthday, Jane joins fourteen other women to hike the Camino de Santiago de Campostela, a centuries-old pilgrimage route stretching 800 kilometers across France and Spain. Before she leaves, Jane consults with a psychic, who warns of cat fights, lost jewellery, encounters with celebrities, a visit from death, and a fair-haired man. After less than a week of travel with a mob of squabbling middle-aged women, some of whom have already started taking cabs, Christmas sets out on her own. That is when her real adventure begins.… (more)
"New Age crap about "needing the group", "bonding with our sisters", "connecting with each other's souls", and the "incredible magic of the Camino" began to piss me off. If I heard the word "awesome" one more time, I was going to scream." (pp. 127-128)
"What the Psychic..." is also well-researched and well-edited. I found in it only two questionable statements: on page 46 it says that the Camino Frances is the longest route to Santiago while this distinction belongs to the Camino de Levante, the Via de la Plata taking the second place. On page 164 Hieronymus Bosch's triptych "The Garden of Earthly Delights" is said to be located in Bruges, Belgium, but in fact it belongs to the Prado Museum in Madrid (the Groeninge Museum in Bruges owns his triptych "The Last Judgment", somewhat similar to the right wing of "The Garden", hence probably the confusion.)
These minor errors do not spoil at all Jane Christmas' book which I would like to highly recomment to all the past and future travellers on the Camino.