Genre Journal (192 pp.)
Keywords Body Self-Image, Caregivers, Death and Dying, Human Worth, Ordinary Life, Patient Experience,
Summary Tuesdays with Morrie is a series of lessons a former (and now current) student has with his teacher (and now mentor) about facing one's death and living one's life. The author, Mitch Albom, is an award-winning sports columnist with the Detroit Free Press. A chance encounter propels Albom, guiltily and fearfully, to the bedside of Morrie Schwartz, his sociology teacher at Brandeis University nearly twenty years ago. [This chance encounter occurs electronically--Albom saw Morrie speaking about dying from ALS (amyotrophic lateral sclerosis) with Ted Koppel on the Nightline television program].
Once together again, teacher and student decide to extend the visit over the remaining months of Morrie's life. Their Tuesday "seminars" explore perennial value issues of everyday life: "Family," "Emotions," "Money," "Marriage," "Our Culture," Fear of Aging," etc. The interchanges, fortunately, are studded with "pearls of wisdom" from Morrie.
Commentary Although not a masterful work of literature, this short best-seller could be instructive for those in the health care community. Not only is careful listening and wise telling extolled, but a subtext revealing Albom's search for and rediscovery of discarded ideals also unfolds in the book.
2006-06-08 17:26:47
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answer #1
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answered by ambrinker1 6
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