Rating: Summary: Good premise, terrible writing Review: I don't know if it what is called the "sophomore jinx" in the publishing industry is the problem here, or if Albom is a "one hit wonder", but this book is truly awful. The writing is dull, forced, unimaginative. That is all too bad because I like the premise of the book, and the best thing I can say about it is that the cover synopsis does a good selling job. So much for truth in advertising.
Rating: Summary: Albom has done it again Review: This was a well written book that causes you to think about your life and the people you encounter everyday. Albom has truly done it again with this story. He makes you fall in love with another 80 something character and takes you on a spiritual journey. The book is creative, thought provoking and touching.
Rating: Summary: Touches your heart Review: Having just lost my father last year I was looking for something comforting to read. This book will touch you in a very gentle and heart warming way. It takes you on a wonderful journey and makes you explore your life and the possiblity of lives you have touched along the way. Read it with an open mind and open heart and you too will be rewarded.
Rating: Summary: An Impossible Read Review: I'll admit, I sloggged through the ridiculously sentimental and poorly written "Tuesdays With Morrie" just so I could see what the fuss was all about. This book is so poorly written I had to literally force my self to read it. I wonder how it ever got published. If this is what the "average" reader finds intellectually stimulating, God help us all. A terribly, terribly wasted read.
Rating: Summary: What A Wonderful Book!!! Review: Dare I say this was the best book I've ever read? It reminded me very much of the movie A Wonderful Life with Jimmie Stewart.The first book I've read by this author, now I'll have to read "Tuesdays With Morrie":) All the books I've been reading strike a chord with me, but this one, I felt that I could have been the main character. I felt such a close relationship to the subject matter. Eddie is a carnival repairman, and the story begins with his death. He feels his life was nothing, but he meets five very surprising people who show him otherwise. Some of these people he didn't even know existed. This was a very quick read, and one that I'd recommend to everyone. This reviewer rates it a five, because it's as good as it gets:)
Rating: Summary: Superb Review: I thought 'Tuesdays With Morrie' was good, this book is even better. Wisdom and lessons throughout. A hard to put down book until your finished. Other fantastic books: Memoir Style books-Nightmares Echo, A Child Called It, Running With Scissors
Rating: Summary: actually very interesting Review: i passed over this book many times, simply b/c i didn't want to read a "preachy" "self-help" type book...but, then someone lent it to me, and i tried...i am so glad i read this book. the title is misleading. it's really about the 5 people eddie meets in heaven. i really enjoyed the story. it was a quick, easy read, but invoked a lot of thought. also, i was glad to see a story in which amusement park workers are portrayed positively.
Rating: Summary: Eloquence has left the building! Review: This book had a good plot along with a vision and possibility of Heaven that I had never considered. It's just my opinion that the descriptiveness was lacking to the point of sometimes wanting to put the book down despite the interest in the story. It was so to the point that it lagged and left you begging for something resonant just to get you through. It was a good book. It just didn't flow. So, to warrant my three stars I'll give you the following line from the book that I carried with me after I finally got through it. "It is because the human spirit knows, deep down, that all lives intersect. That death doesn't just take someone, it misses someone else, and in the small distance between being taken and being missed, lives are changed."
Rating: Summary: Knowledge is Your Salvation Review: This book is a gem. Like all great stories it has metaphors we can associate with the realities of our lives. There are five such metaphors in Albom's story that touch upon ignorance, hate, resentment, longing, and guilt. So, what's the lesson? A great story must be able to give a perspective about life to better it. Five People, five lessons, five emotions, five perspectives, like the glistening facets of a gem, all intertwined and related to one another ending up in a needless trap we call worrying. Events in our lives happen for a reason, though not always good. But what makes us worry is not the bad outcome, rather lack of understanding why. There is salvation in knowledge. While I'm telling you this, Albom is showing it in his story The Five People You Meet in Heaven.
Rating: Summary: A Modern Classic Review: People have taken to comparing new books to past success. "My Fractured Life" (Rikki Lee Travolta) is this decade's "Catcher in the Rye" (JD Salinger) they say. "Secret Life of Bees" (Sue Monk Kidd) is this decade's "Color Purple" (Alice Walker), it can also be said. What of "The Five People We Meet in Heaven" (Mitch Albom)? What great literary wonder should be consider this to be the reincarnation of? In the game of comparisons, I think we have to give serious thought to the notion that "The Five People We Meet in Heaven" is our decade's "A Christmas Carol" (Charles Dickens) because it is a view of life after it is essentially over, a validation of what cannot be undone, and yet with an uplifting end. Whether you agree with the specific title of my comparison or not, I am confident you'll find "The Five People You Meet In Heaven" to be with "My Fractured Life" and "Secret Life of Bees" as one of our decade's classics.
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