Monday, August 11, 2008

For one more day - Mitch Albom


Last night I finished a novel by Mitch Albom entitled For one more day. It was a story about a baseball player,Chick who decided to kill himself after a lot of terrible things happened in his life. But, when he involved in a car crash, he suddenly walked to his mom's house and surprised that his mother who died fews years ago, still inside the house and treat him very well, like every mother in the world did. Chick could not believed what he exactly saw. His mother, Posey, asked him to spent one day with her. Chick missed his mom very much and starting from that moment, he spent a day with his mom and he finally realized that he never stand up for his mom and so many things he done wrong to his mom before she died.

Albom's stories provoke us to ponder and question how we approach these relationships, either under truly extraordinary or utterly banal circumstances. "What could I have done better?" is the resonating question we think about regarding past relationships and "What can I do now?" spurs us to think about our present relationships.

Albom uses this formula in his most recent novel for one more day where he delves into the question "If you had one more day with someone who is no longer in your life, who would it be?" For the protagonist, Charles "Chick" Benetto, it is his mother Posey. We meet Chick in his mid fifties, a man who has carried ordinary and traumatic childhood experiences and expectations into his adulthood. A child of divorce and an absentee father, Chick and his sister are raised by their mother who is both an embarrassment and a compass to them both, especially Chick. As an adult, he has a briefly unsuccessful stint as a Major League baseball player and an even longer and more unsuccessful stint as a salesman.

Following Posey's death in his forties, Chick spirals into eight years of alcoholism and self doubt, which results in Chick leaving his family and losing contact with his daughter. With nothing left in his life, Chick decides to go back to town where he grew up to end it all. In the process, he ends up spending one more day with his mother. It is a remarkable day of discovering who Posey truly was and how her actions influenced his life in positive and negative ways.

The pace of back story intermingled with the present is true to Albom's style, giving the reader just enough information to grasp and propel them forward to the protagonist's next revelation. Successful character development is key in for one more day and the reader will not be disappointed by Albom's descriptions. They are vivid and tangible. Had Albom chosen a female protagonist and slightly different storyline, for one more day would have easily fallen into the "chick lit" category. By choosing Charles "Chick" Benetto as the main character and crafting such a layered and absorbing story line, Albom has successfully appealed to a diverse audience.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Dila...

post laa entry pasal ko me gitar hero smpai abes dgn semangat gile tp X SAVE tuh...hahahaha...