| ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Product Details
|
Albom takes a big risk with the novel; such a story can easily veer into the saccharine and preachy, and this one does in moments. But, for the most part, Albom's telling remains poignant and is occasionally profound. Even with its flaws, The Five People You Meet in Heaven is a small, pure, and simple book that will find good company on a shelf next to It's A Wonderful Life. --Patrick O'Kelley
Tags Customers Associate with This Product(What's this?)Click on a tag to find related items, discussions, and people.
|
|
Share your thoughts with other customers:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Most helpful customer reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
JUDGE IT FOR WHAT IT IS,
By Adrienne Moss (Durango, CO) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Five People You Meet In Heaven (Hardcover)
You need to judge "THE FIVE PEOPLE YOU MEET IN HEAVEN" for what it is, a book. It is unfair to judge it as a fact-finding prophecy about the laws of Heaven. It's not. It's a book. "OH GOD" with George Burns was not an analysis of God either. It was a movie. They are for ENTERTAINMENT PURPOSES!Beyond that, you also need to judge "THE FIVE PEOPE YOU MEET IN HEAVEN" as a book unto itself. It is difficult to compare it to books like "SECRET LIFE OF BEES" or "MY FRACTURED LIFE" because despite the fact they are all great books, they are all individual and unique books and should be read and judged individually. Of them, "THE FIVE PEOPLE YOU MEET IN HEAVEN" is touching. I personally learned some things about myself not because the book told me things about myself but because it inspired me to look inside myself in different ways. That is what good books do. "SECRET LIFE OF BEES" and "MY FRACTURED LIFE" both made me look inside myself too, but in entirely different ways. There is no law that we must apply what we read or reflect on life's lessons. It is what we are inspired to do when a writer touches a chord we can relate to.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great and insightful book,
By
This review is from: The Five People You Meet In Heaven (Paperback)
Heaven is a very personal place. The visions of heaven from various religious traditions tap into hopes (and fears) of people past and present, but ultimately, just as the world is different for each of us, so too must heaven be. Throughout this difference, however, is a question that is perhaps one of the more universal longings in the history of humanity - the quest to find the meaning of life, and the meaning of our lives in particular. It is this longing that Mitch Albom, best known prior to this book for his wonderful writing in `Tuesdays with Morrie'.
The tale begins at the end, not the beginning. Of course, in life, every ending is a beginning of some sort. The end here is the end of Eddie's life - Eddie, a veteran who has gone through times of trouble and tragedy as well as times of joy and optimism, didn't have the life he wanted. Like most people, what Eddie wanted shifted over time, and even when he got what he wanted, it was somehow lacking, or disappointing; on the other hand, there were unexpected things. Eddie got married, but as with most marriages, it didn't always live up to the dream of the initial love. However, his wife Marguerite remained the love of Eddie's life, and she was one of the five people he met in heaven. This was his closest relationship, but not the only important relationship in his life. Perhaps drawing on the idea of six degrees of separation, there are people connected to Eddie who are companion guides in heaven that Eddie didn't even realise he was connected to. There is the Blue Man, the side-show freak at the amusement park where Eddie worked; there was the captain from his military days; there was Ruby, for whom Ruby Pier, the amusement park's location, was named; and then there is final person, one that Eddie only knew as a shadow on earth, but who has the biggest impact, and is the one whose hands offer a very touching form of salvation. Each person has insights and lessons to share with Eddie. Sometimes they reinterpret the events of Eddie's life; sometimes they simply share their sides of the story, that give a fullness to the narrative of life. This is no easy glossing over of reality - none of the characters attempt to explain how, at the heart of it, life really is fair. Indeed, the Blue Man explains in no uncertain terms that life is not fair, stating that if it were, `no good person would ever die young.' There are issues of redemption and issues of forgiveness here, both of which are not easy to come by, nor always easy to accept. Eddie's life, like most of our lives, needs forgiveness, both in his own sense of life and action, and forgiveness for his own actions. He learns to forgive others as he learns that he himself can be forgiven. It is a powerful realisation. Albom draws the story together in an interesting fashion. The scenes in heaven are interwoven with scenes from earth, with analysis from the people and historical narrative and internal dialogue of Eddie's life. There are also pieces that show the life around Eddie, and how sometimes it works and doesn't work. In the end, life goes on for those Eddie left behind; despite the fact that he had no relatives and no monuments or legacies to leave behind (his few remaining friends worried about who was to pay for the funeral), in fact his actions at amusement park served purposes far beyond what Eddie could have dreamed. Despite the feeling that he had lived his life in go-nowhere, do-nothing job, he has in fact fulfilled a great purpose, explained by a little girl - `Children. You keep them safe.' His last act on earth was to save a little girl from an amusement park ride accident, but in fact, he had been doing that all along. Albom writes in parable form at times, and in sermon form at times, and in storytelling form at times. These weave together in a wonderful combination. `On earth...when you fell asleep, you sometimes dreamed your heaven and those dreams helped to form it. But there was no reason for such dreams now.' Eddie's existence goes on, as does the rest of the life of the world, in ways that we do not have the ability to follow. In our dreams, we can envision much; in Albom's writing is the stuff of dreams.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Five stars for The Five People,
By Reeda Reader (Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Five People You Meet In Heaven (Paperback)
Our book club recently picked three winners----something that NEVER happens. And needless to say, while we loved the other two---KITE RUNNER and McCrae's BARK OF THE DOGWOOD, we thought THE FIVE PEOPLE was the best, easiest to read, and most inspirational. Mitch Albom hit the nail on the head with his first book, and he's done just as well with the second one. This is a heartwarming story and there's something for everyone in this charming tale.
Also highly recommended: Kite Runner and Bark of the Dogwood
Share your thoughts with other customers: Create your own review
Want to see more reviews on this item?
|
Most recent customer reviews |
|
|
|