REVIEW

Book Review: The Five People You Meet in Heaven by Mitch Albom

Written by Don Baiocchi
Published May 02, 2006

I'm trying to think of a love song that I like. I know it's cool right now to like some love songs in an ironic way, pumping your fist in the air and shouting "Yes!" when something by Journey plays on the bar jukebox. (Could that trend please run its course by the way? Journey, like most things, was much cooler — or, at least, a notch above hellacious — when everyone wasn't shoving down your throat how post-ironically "cool" they are now.) But I can't even think of a single, straightforward, sentimental love song — one without a minor chord progression or melancholy lyric — that I really enjoy.

So, although I didn't know what to expect, I wasn't optimistic about reading Mitch Albom's The Five People You Meet in Heaven. I had heard from various sources that he was sappy and sentimental, two characteristics I don't normally respond to, whether in music or literature, without cringing. Granted, many of these opinions were voiced by fellow fiction writing majors at Columbia College, where it was normal to despise any popular literature, even if you hadn't read it. So I was surprised when, halfway through his novel, I was thoroughly enjoying Albom's story.

It doesn't give anything away to say the five people you meet in heaven are actually the five people Eddie, our protagonist, meets in heaven. Albom starts at the end of Eddie's life and works both forward and backwards. He explores what happens to Eddie after he dies in a freak amusement park accident and flashes back to various stages in Eddie's life, beginning with his birth and using subsequent birthdays along the way to anchor the pivotal moments in his life.

Of course, the five people — each of whom had influenced Eddie's life while they were alive — all have something to teach Eddie. A cynic might find these lessons cloying or even preachy, but you know what? I bought it. I fully believed that these people would exist in real life and that their lessons, while maybe not completely original, are worthwhile.

While Eddie could just have been the cantankerous old man stereotype, Albom layers him with shades of vulnerability, naiveté, joy, pain and pride. Even the coldest cynic would appreciate the sweet highs and stifling lows of Eddie's life-long romance with his wife, Marguerite.

I once heard a psychiatrist explain that a troubled, unsatisfying relationship between a man and his father is part of the "male psyche." That is, it's a given that all men, regardless of race or class, have to deal with. Albom carefully explores both sides of the rocky relationship between Eddie and his father, revealing the bitterness, petty grudges and mutual failed expectations that so often form the unspoken pain men carry against their fathers or sons for decades.

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Book Review: The Five People You Meet in Heaven by Mitch Albom
Published: May 02, 2006
Type: Review
Section: Books
Filed Under: Books: Literature and Fiction, Books: Spirituality
Writer: Don Baiocchi
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#1 — May 2, 2006 @ 05:56AM — Gordon Hauptfleisch [URL]

Good review, although all that talk about water and love recalled to mind these immortal words:

Be assured that a walk through the seas of most souls would scarcely get your feet wet.
Fall not in love, therefore, it will stick to your face...

...You are a fluke
Of the universe.
You have no right to be here.
And whether you can hear it or not
The universe is laughing behind your back.

("Deteriorata")

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