Publisher’s write-up:
‘Maybe it was a grandparent, a
teacher or a colleague. Someone older, patient and wise, who understood you
when you were young and impassioned, helped you to see the world as a more
profound place and gave you sound advice to guide your way through it. For
Mitch, it was Morrie Schwartz, the college professor who had taught him nearly
twenty years before.
Perhaps, like Mitch, you lost
track of this mentor as the years passed, the insights faded and the world
seemed colder. Wouldn’t you like to see that person again, to ask the bigger
questions that still haunt you and receive wisdom for your busy life in the way
you once did when you were younger?’
Tuesdays with Morrie is a
compilation of a series of exchanges between the author Mitch Albom and his
terminally ill professor, Morrie Schwartz, who had been diagnosed with ALS. The
author used to take Morrie’s classes when he was a student every Tuesday and they continued the
same tradition, of meeting every Tuesday, and Mitch talking about various
aspects of life, such as family, emotions, death, etc.
The journey as such is wonderful to read, and
the camaraderie between Morrie and Mitch was seen very well, wherein, both had
something to give to each other. Mitch was inspired by the positivity that
Morrie displayed, despite being diagnosed with a terrible illness and saw the
positivity in each situation, including the places where Morrie started enjoying
the dependencies he had to perform even the most basic activities.
The book was also very easy to read, which is
similar to the experience I had with the other Mitch Albom book that I have
read so far (The Five People you meet in Heaven). This follows the story of
Mitch very well and how he is able find himself again, after all these discussions
with Morrie.
While he was disappointed over being estranged
from his brother who was in Spain, and how the author explains that Morrie
replaced him – this aspect could have been explored more by the author. Added
to that, I also felt that the conversations Morrie had with Ted Koppel (the
broadcast journalist)could have been more chronological, wherein, the fact that
they were disconnected and often inserted between the different Tuesdays that
Mitch went to meet Morie, I often lost track of where the conversation was
previously left off.
On that note, this is a good book, and an easy
to read book, which helps you feel good and on that note, I award the book a
rating of seven on ten.
Rating –
7/10
Have a
nice day,
Andy
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