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TUESDAYS WITH MORRIE (EXPORT) (A FORMAT) Paperback – 1 December 1998
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- Print length208 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherSphere
- Publication date1 December 1998
- Dimensions18 x 1.5 x 13 cm
- ISBN-100751527378
- ISBN-13978-0751527377
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Product description
About the Author
Mitch Albom writes for the DETROIT FREE PRESS, and has been voted America's No. 1 sports columnist ten times by the Associated Press Sports Editors. A former professional musician, he hosts a daily radio show on WJR in Detroit.
Product details
- Publisher : Sphere; Exported edition (1 December 1998)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 208 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0751527378
- ISBN-13 : 978-0751527377
- Item Weight : 190 g
- Dimensions : 18 x 1.5 x 13 cm
- Country of Origin : United Kingdom
- Best Sellers Rank: #69 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Mitch Albom is the author of numerous books of fiction and nonfiction, which have collectively sold more than forty million copies in forty-seven languages worldwide. He has written seven number-one New York Times bestsellers – including TUESDAYS WITH MORRIE, the bestselling memoir of all time, which topped the list for four straight years – award-winning TV films, stage plays, screenplays, a nationally syndicated newspaper column, and a musical. Through his work at the Detroit Free Press, he was inducted into both the National Sports Media Association and Michigan Sports halls of fame and is the recipient of the 2010 Red Smith Award for lifetime achievement. After bestselling memoir FINDING CHIKA and “Human Touch,” the weekly serial written and published online in real-time to raise funds for pandemic relief, his latest work is a return to fiction with THE STRANGER IN THE LIFEBOAT (Harper, November 2021). He founded and oversees SAY Detroit, a consortium of nine different charitable operations in his hometown, including a nonprofit dessert shop and food product line to fund programs for Detroit’s most underserved citizens. He also operates an orphanage in Port-Au-Prince, Haiti, which he visits monthly. He lives with his wife, Janine, in Michigan. Learn more at www.mitchalbom.com, www.saydetroit.org, and www.havefaithaiti.org.
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Reviewed in India on 25 January 2023
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The importance of relationships: Morrie emphasizes the importance of connecting with others and building meaningful relationships. He argues that these connections are what gives life purpose and meaning.
The importance of self-awareness: Morrie encourages Mitch to be more self-aware, both in terms of his emotions and in terms of his values. He suggests that by understanding ourselves better, we can live more authentic and fulfilling lives.
The value of being present: Morrie stresses the importance of living in the present moment, rather than dwelling in the past or worrying about the future. He believes that true happiness comes from fully experiencing each moment.
The impact of negative emotions: Morrie explains how negative emotions like anger, fear, and envy can harm us and how we should try to overcome these emotions and their effects.
The power of forgiveness: Morrie stresses the importance of forgiving others, as well as ourselves. He argues that holding onto anger and resentment only hurts us in the long run.
The importance of giving: Morrie believes that giving to others is one of the most important things we can do in life, whether that means giving time, money, or love.
The acceptance of death: Morrie talked about how death is a natural part of life, and it's nothing to be feared. He encourages the reader to think about the end of their life and how they want to spend it.
These are some of the key themes and lessons that Morrie shares in the book. He provides a unique and insightful perspective on how to live a meaningful and fulfilled life despite the challenges we face.
Having shared 3 years of my life with the amazing man that my husband is, I have become wiser than I ever had been. He has taught me that the world is a nice place even if it hasn’t treated me well. There are many who have and many who will. So stop criticizing, and try to look for goodness in everyone. Self-pity is the worst of all the pity. It makes one lose confidence and subsequently, all happiness drains away. It is okay to cry for ourselves, but more important to buck up, and move on. Everyone has regrets, I have even if you don’t. It is not a means to get negative, it is, in fact, a means to do things better so as to not regret again. One thing that I haven’t had a chance to discuss with anyone, is death. You are too young to talk about such things, they would say. But I know, death doesn’t see the age, it just seeks. Maybe, someday, decades later I will have my husband talk to me on death, and if I remember this review by then, I’ll come back and edit. I am what I am because of my family. No, they don’t define me, rather they have made me the person I am today. My parents helped shape my character, teaching me that being a girl doesn’t mean you have to be weak and my husband further solidified this notion by letting me do anything I want, guiding me along the way. And yes, my little girl, she is bringing out the very in best me. My emotions have become profound. I know not to feel ashamed if I shed a tear watching some scene in a video or imagining my little girl all grown up. I know how to accept that others have emotions too, and if I am unable to understand them, I should at least be empathetic. Over the years, I’ve grown. Emotionally, mentally and physically. We all do. What we all don’t do is accept it, especially the physical part. The growth to the peak and then, the slow descent, aging. Oh, where did I lose my youth, this phrase makes one forget the truth. Acceptance of wrinkles, or lines, of shriveled skin, of receding hairline, of a bulging belly, of crows feet, of bad eyesight, of deteriorating health, of dwindling grip, is not at all easy. But, it must be done, and only doing so gracefully will make it easier. Yes, money can these days help a lot in the process, but it can’t stop the process. Money can’t bring back the youth, but it can make the old age better. Money is not happiness, but it is important for happiness. My thoughts may differ here, then again, whose won’t?
Do you believe your family and friends will love you even when you are gone? I believe it because I know it. Love is something that never fades, it just passes. What I received as love from my parents will reflect on how I love my daughter. My daughter has never seen my grandfather and I have never seen my grandmother, but I will surely tell her stories of him, the way my father tells us stories of his mother, which makes me miss, and love my grandmother, long long after she has gone. I also know that my husband would love me, long long after I am gone. When we married, we weren’t in love. Like with most of the arranged marriages, we were practically strangers thrown together to spend our lives. It wasn’t until the first anniversary that we fell in love, realized the importance of each other and committed ourselves fully into our marriage. We were wedded first, married later, the way our culture demands. Who is this culture by the way? A person? A group? What is it? It was sheer luck that we fell in love, what if we hadn’t? Would our culture have let us part ways? The main aim of the culture should be let people live their lives happily instead of forcing them to fake their happiness just for the sake of culture! I believe forgiveness is the key here, for those who have been wronged, forgive and move on. It will not affect anyone else but you alone, and the peace thereafter is more important than burning in anger.
There are no perfections in life, only in theory. A day can be perfect to you but not to me. Same goes for a person, or a thing or anything else for that matter. Only our way of perception can bring about perfection. When the time comes for me to leave my physical body behind, I wish I have enough time to say my goodbyes, which by the way won’t be enough ever, but it will prepare me and my dear ones for the imminent death that lays ahead.
Life is meant to live, not spend. Have a happy life everyone!

Reviewed in India 🇮🇳 on 25 January 2023

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Close family experience of ALS, or as we say UK: MND (a number of years ago). I knew this book would be emotional, hugely so. But comforting too. To take comfort in what we did as a few family members and not have to think we were too wanting in what we should have done. MA has written a kind insight into the journey of the illness. The devastating disbelief, but the opportunity to do something specific and important to us, for this brave person in our midst. We were fortunate: short-lived time from diagnosis to end ... It is a desperate and unforgiving illness.

Both learn to value friendship, to relish in the simplest delights in life and to seize the day while there is opportunity.