Newcomers to Albom might find his goodness cloying, but fans of the first book will have plenty to appreciate here. Because she was young, Annie never thought about endings. Just as Albom’s themes are rarely morally ambiguous, his prose style is also straightforward, though it’s surprisingly unsentimental. the next person you meet in heaven US UK German Korean This is a story about a woman named Annie, and it begins at the end, with Annie falling from the sky. But did Annie’s sacrifice save her husband? Now that she’s in Heaven, is there any way for her to know if he lived? Between misunderstandings with her mother and heavy-handed heartbreaks, readers will see these seeds of wisdom coming from miles away. What ensues is a series of travels through episodes in Annie’s depressing life, and the lessons she has learned from them. The next thing she knows, she’s meeting her first person in heaven. Annie insists on giving her battered husband one of her lungs. Sweet, unassuming Annie takes a hot air balloon ride with her new husband, and both are nearly killed when their balloon runs into power lines. Albom’s readers will remember Annie as the child Eddie the maintenance worker saved from a grisly death in the first book, but his sacrifice didn’t do much to turn her luck around. In this simplistic follow-up to The Five People You Meet in Heaven, Albom tells the story of Annie as she finds herself at the pearly gates and imparts five more lessons on readers from five more people.
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