The
Five People You Meet in Heaven
By
Mitch Albom
Reviewed
by Catherine K. Arveseth
If
you loved Tuesdays with Morrie, you will delight in Mitch
Albom’s latest publication, The Five People you Meet in Heaven.
It is a wisely poetic tale that whisks you into magical places,
rich with lessons of hope. For me, it resurrected the fading
ideal that all humanity is connected. Although not a Christmas
story by setting, the fable beams with the spirit of Christ,
stirring emotions of love and sacrifice for our fellow men.
It is about forgiveness, purpose and people.
Albom
dedicates the book to his uncle, Edward Beitchman, who “gave
him his first concept of heaven.” Albom writes, “Every year
around the Thanksgiving table, [Eddie] spoke of a night in the
hospital when he awoke to see the souls of his departed loved
ones sitting on the edge of the bed, waiting for him. I never
forgot that story. And I never forgot him.”
We
gather that Albom was deeply moved by his uncle’s experience,
out of which evolved this work. And so he launches us into
the life of his main character, Eddie. Eddie is the Head of
Maintenance at an Amusement Park. To the children, he is known
as “the ride man at Ruby Pier”. Eddie is 83 years old. He
has worked at Ruby Pier all his life, watching the rides evolve
and accelerate, from “Lollipop Swings” to “The Vortex”. Some
things remain the same - the taffy stand, the smell of cotton
candy smeared into the pavement, the park name, and his love
for the children who frequent it. Eddie is tired as he reflects
on his past, wondering if he has accomplished anything of worth
in his life. Sporting a cane, he makes his way around the park,
carefully checking all the rides to ensure they are working
safely. On this day, he takes time to craft an “animal” out
of pipe cleaners he keeps in his pocket for a small girl. This
is his existence, a meager one – one that the world would look
on as unimportant – an old man, undervalued and alone.
In
minutes, Eddie will die in an attempt to save the life of the
little girl with the pipe cleaner rabbit who is unsuspectingly
seated under a rapidly falling cart. Albom begins, “This is
a story about a man named Eddie and it begins at the end, with
Eddie dying in the sun. It might seem strange to start a story
with an ending. But all endings are also beginnings. We just
don’t know it at the time.” (1)
In
the first chapter, ironically titled “The End”, Albom offers
us this metaphor: “Sometimes stories meet at the corners, and
sometimes they cover one another completely, like stones beneath
a river.” (10) As we are shuttled into heaven with Eddie and then back through his life,
we see that Albom’s stories gracefully cover one another with
echoes, repeating themes and objects of memory.
Albom
acknowledges that everyone has an idea of heaven, as do most
religions, and all ideas should be respected. The version he
represents in this book is his “guess”, a “wish” he says, that
his uncle, and others like him who felt unimportant on earth,
will realize how much they mattered and how they were loved.
Eddie
enters heaven. “The sky was a misty pumpkin shade, then a deep
turquoise, then a bright lime. Eddie was floating, and his
arms were still extended…the tower cart was falling. He remembered
that. The little girl – Amy? Annie? – she was crying. He remembered
that. He remembered lunging. He remembered hitting the platform.
He felt her two small hands in his. Then what?
Did I save her?” (21)
A
journey through heaven awaits Eddie. Along this journey he
will meet five people. That’s how it works. Everyone meets
five people – five people who were part of your life. These
people provide explanations that make all the difference. Eddie’s
first person explains, “I am your first person, Edward…I came
here to wait for you, to stand in your line, to tell you my
story, which becomes part of yours. There will be others for
you too…they all crossed your path before they died. And they
altered it forever.” (35)
Albom
is a master storyteller. His is the type of colorful, tangible
writing that keeps you racing forward to the next chapter, thinking
and feeling along the way. In retrospect, you wonder if you
had time to stop and catch your breath. In The Five People
You Meet in Heaven, we hear echoes of the classics. For
me, it conjured reminiscences of Dicken’s timeless tale, A
Christmas Carol. Maybe it’s just the season - but Albom
accomplishes the same wondrous feat as Dickens. He intertwines
the past, present and future of one individual, while causing
his readers to examine their own past, present and future -
the words they said to a stranger, the anger they couldn’t discard,
the what ifs or should-have beens. In the end, however, the
magic works. The readers heave that sigh of relief that comes
with reconciliation and the turning of a heart. For Eddie,
his reckoning comes in the realization that his life was often
what it should have been. He didn’t make perfect choices, but
more often than he realized, he was in the right place at the
right time.
Eddie’s
“first person” further explains, “There are no random acts…we
are all connected…you can no more separate one life from another
than you can separate a breeze from the wind…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…there
is a balance to it all. One withers, another grows. Birth
and death are part of a whole.” (48)
Other
lessons like this grace Albom’s story, including an unexpected
ending that will grab at your heart. At times you are uncomfortable,
at times you smile, at times you can’t hold back the swelling
of emotion. The Five People You Meet in Heaven would
make a perfect Christmas gift, the kind of book you could read
in one day, after presents are opened and festivities have come
to a quiet lull. How worthwhile
it is to remember, “Strangers…are just family you have yet to
come to know.” (49)
I
believe Albom’s book will become a timeless tale of its own.
I look forward to the next. He has left us wondering whose
hands we have touched, and felt, and pressed into our own.
“Each affects the other and the other affects the next, and
the world is full of stories, but the stories are all one.”
(196)