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Showing reviews 1-5 of 411
A very heart-warming tale August 13, 2010 Israel Drazin (Boca Raton, Florida) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Albom is the well-deserved best-selling author of books such as Tuesday with Morrie and The Five People You Meet in Heaven. His books are well-written in simple language, generally short sentences, filled with moving tear-jerking emotions, people whom we are drawn to like and admire, smaltzy, and good.
Charles "Chick" Benetto made a mess of his life. He was a drunk and divorced and his daughter did not invite him to her wedding because she feared being embarrassed. He had a choice while growing up to side with his father, who had abandoned his mother, or side with his mother who raised him and who if we believe his story, and we do, was a saint. He chose his father.
Chick tells the story of his life, about the times his mother stood up for him and when he did not stand up for his mother. He tells how his father pushed him, even after the separation, to baseball, how he abandoned college and hurt his mother to play ball, how he was hurt and could not play again, how he never recovered from losing his chance to play.
He decides to commit suicide, but ends up in a car accident, walks to his family home, and finds his mother who had been dead for eight years. He and his mother talk and he realizes what he did wrong.
Albom tells this story in a very heartwarming manner.
Should be so careful who we left out of our lives July 31, 2010 To This book reminded me of the song Live Like we're dying! I dk why but it just did, I thought the main plot was to teach us a moral lesson about putting those who care about us first! The story explains itself its a quick and fast read but its a good read with a good moral lesson. This book is about Quality not Quantity and I really enjoyed it! It makes you open up your mind and think about telling those who you love that you love them before its too late.
Good read. Fast and enjoyable!
Great reading! July 27, 2010 S. A. Krell (Florida) I love the way Mitch Albom writes! I have all of his books. You really get to know & love his characters. Buy this book, you won't be sorry, I promise!
more uplifting than the last July 16, 2010 Jennifer K. Paweleck-Bellingrodt, Psy.D. (Phoenix, Arizona) in my opinion, albom has a way of reaching his readers by being touching and sad at the same time. i've seen this theme across the three books of his that i've read thus far. i was pleased with this book more than The Five People You Meet in Heaven, though, because it had more of the touching and less of the sad in the end. i believe that children ideally have a special connection with each of their parents, and the story here is about a boy who missed out on that in each of those relationships, one in which he tried and the other in which he didn't. the sad part is that the relationship in which he tried, the one with his dad, left him disappointed; and the relationship in which he didn't, the one with his mom, left him despondent in the end in being an opportunity lost. the good news is that he was given a second chance to have that connection with his mom. albom is not my favorite author, but i keep getting led back to him by others in my life, and i believe there's a reason for this, so i take this to heart. what i do like is that his books are about leaving an imprint and having an imprint left upon you at the same time.
Theres a story behind everything July 5, 2010 Purple Reader If you ever decide to read this book, have a box of Kleenex next to you. This book will leave you smiling, while tears of nostalgia stream out of your eyes. This is a story about a family, more specifically about a broken man, how he broke and how he got fixed.
Are you a mama's boy or a daddy's boy? If you knew the answer, then I pity you. No one should choose. Chick Benetto had chosen to be a daddy's boy when he was a kid, and he spent all his life trying to please his old man. Then one day, his daddy left him and his family, and they were left alone. And from then on, he became a mama's boy. His mother was always the soft one, the one that comforted him and nagged him, the one that punished him, and forced him to do his homework. His father was the colder one, the one who didn't show much emotion and didn't seem like he cared about anything. Except baseball.
When Chick went to College his mama's dream was for him to study well and get a degree, and get a job. However, he got into that college with a baseball scholarship, and naturally he played baseball in college. And one day, his dad came out of the blue to one of his games. He watched, and didn't say anything; he came the next game too. Then when they finally did speak, his father asked if Chick would like to go around with him, and at this moment Chick could have hurt him, could have done anything, it was his play, but deep down he was still his daddy's boy. And so he obediently listened. His father told him about a minor league baseball team that might want him. Chick dropped out of school, and he let down his mother to please his father.
His baseball career lasted about six weeks, he got married had a daughter and became a salesman. Time drifted, and he lost contact with his old man. Until his mothers 79th birthday. He didn't call to say happy birthday to his ex-wife though, he called because he wanted Chick back in the game. Chick lied to his mother and family and left to play baseball. His mother died the next day. He didn't get back into the game.
After that, Chick gave his life to alcohol and regret. He regretted going to that game, he regretted so many things. He got divorced, became jobless and when his daughter got married and didn't invite him to the wedding, he lost it. He decided to take his life away.
Then he saw his dead mother, and she taught him many things on that last day. She brought him around their old home, just like another regular day, and she loved him like every other day. This book showed me how easily it is to forget what mothers do for us, all the little things that we may find annoying all the nags and worries that mother's do. In the end, his mother saved him, one last time.
This was a ghost story. A family story. A mothers story. And a son's story.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 411
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