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The Five People You Meet in Heaven

The Five People You Meet in Heaven

List Price: $19.95
Your Price: $11.97
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
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: 5 stars
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: 3 stars
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: 5 stars
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: 5 stars
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.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Not the Best Guide to Heaven
Review: A soft read, with much imagination.But, if you want more than that, I would suggest picking up a book or two about people who have been there; i.e. 'Near-Death Experiences' such as Tiffany Snow ("Psychic Gifts in the Christian Life"), or the numerous research documents available through IANDS (International Association of Near-Death Studies). Imagination is fine - but this is the information age - getting a group synopsis of heaven through unrelated people with NDEs can get you a better window, without having to stretch it too much.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Creative Parable About Heaven
Review: Mitch Albom's parable is not a book that is overly big on characters, plot or analysis. It does not use difficult vocabulary or attempt to give you an in-depth plot description, but what it does it synthesize a person's account of heaven into five chapters. A creative concept for a novel, it achieves its point mainly through its simplicity.

What is the point? Well, the point revealed will be different for each individual. My perception of the novel, in it essence, is that the past effects our future and that we, in some odd or unique way, are all connected with those around us whether we realize it or not. Ultimately, all events and people have an essential role in our lives, and that there is something better out there for us if we can address our issues in life.

Eddie, the book's protagonist, is a maintenance worker for an amusement park and gets into an accident that claims his life. He can't remember all the details of his last moments, but we follow Eddie into heaven where he, one by one, encounters five people from his past. These people were not necessarily the closest ones to him in life, but they all played a significant role in his being here. Within each of these people there is a message revealed that Eddie uncovers, a lesson about life and the relationships that he had in life. There is a progression from the first to the fifth person, and Eddie becomes closer to Heaven as he understands more and more with each story.

The difficult aspect of such a book is in expressing a message or lesson without becoming a lecture. Albom teeters on this edge, but I think he does a commendable job in keeping the situations and people involved in Eddie's life the focal point of the novel, as well as the descriptions and sensations that Eddie feels on his journey to Heaven. He tells the story, and lets the reader decide. For this reason some will like it, and others will want to put it down after a few pages. Personally, I thought it was a uniquely inspiring story and would recommend it to anyone.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Not what I expected, but excellent nonetheless...
Review: I had read "Tuesdays with Morrie" and was absolutely blown away by the power of Album's tale... Of course, when I realized he had written another "inspiring" book, I immediately put it on my "To Read" list... Once I did read it, however, I did not find that I got what I was expecting... This is not to say that I was disappointed, I was instead taken off guard by the angle at which "Five People" is told.

Anyone who knows what "Morrie" was like know that it is told directly from Album's perspective. He interacted with Morrie regularly and he wrote his story for all of us to read... I thought that "Five People" would be similar to this because I knew that Eddie was his uncle.

The fact that this book is entirely fiction, based loosely on things that Eddie had told Album while he was still living, changes the angle of the tale dramatically. Suddenly, the novel is no longer entirely philosophical, as was "Morrie," but it is now Album's interpretation of what he believed Eddie would say.

The story is inspiring at parts and the way the characters mesh together and interact is laudible. I also enjoyed the factual information that was woven throughout the tale. However, I can see where many people may be disappointed with the book.

One reviewer stated well that this book is entirely subjective... Of you are the type of person who enjoys "touchy-feely" reads, then this book is the one for you. If you are looking for a deep and insightful guide of what Heaven may hold for you, then I'd say that you should pass.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Inspiring and deep
Review: Cory Lynn,
Inspiring and deep
This is an awe inspiring and extremely deep book with so many lessons packed inside of it. Everyone of every genre should read this thought provoking book.

I also want to recommend: Nightmares Echo,Beauty For Ashes, Finding Fish,Secret Life Of Bees-all courageous books

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Entertaining
Review: I never thought that this book had to provide the meaning of life. I read it to be entertained--and I was. The book is an easy read which I find I need every so often. I enjoyed the book and did not find it to be preachy. I think some people really do go through their lives in a vacuum of sorts and DON'T realize that human interaction is more than meets the eye. I recommend this book to anyone who enjoys reading fiction for its entertainment value.


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