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Thursday, November 29, 2018
The Five People You Meet in Heaven
The Five People You Meet in Heaven by Mitch Albom 196
pages
I first read this delightful short novel when
it was first published in 2003. I couldn’t
put it down, then, and I couldn’t put it down this time either. I wanted to
refresh my memory about Eddie, the 83 year old amusement park maintenance man
before I started Mitch Albom’s sequel, “The Next Person You Meet in Heaven.”
The story starts at the end, with Eddie dying
on his eighty-third birthday. Eddie had worked at Ruby Pier in the Maintenance Department
all his life. He considered himself a nobody, no one special. But Eddie was
very special. Every day he walked through the park. He could hear a problem
with one of the rides as acutely as if the park was empty and completely
silent. All the regulars knew Eddie and loved him. He even carried yellow pipe cleaners
in his shirt pocket to make little animals for the kids.
On that particular day, Eddie was nearby when
one of the rides began to fall. He
rushed to the scene, grabbed little Annie by the hands and got her out of the
way before one of the ride’s cars plummeted to Earth.
Eddie arrives in heaven. It’s not at all like
he expected. There he learns that there are five people, whom you may or may
not know, that are connected to your life. They are to answer the question that
haunts us all: why am I here? What is my
purpose?
As Eddie advances through heaven, those
questions are answered. Eddie soon learns that he wasn’t a nobody, he was
important. Very important. Not just the maintenance man at an amusement park,
but his real job was to protect the children.
Eddie’s story has struck with me through the
years. Oftentimes I find myself wondering why I am here and what my purpose is.
Then I think of this little story and wonder who might my five people be. This read is just as compelling and appealing
as it was the first time I read it. That’s why “The Five People You Meet in Heaven” receives 6 out of 5 stars in Julie’s world.
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