Here's "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow," narrated by Bing Crosby.
Part One
Part Two
31 October 2008
30 October 2008
29 October 2008
"Autumn burned brightly, a running flame through the mountains, a torch flung to the trees.". . . . . Faith Baldwin
Labels:
quotation
25 October 2008
16 October 2008
Operation Ceppo, The Homestretch
Everything is now painted except the "snow" on the bottom level. I am detailing this a bit withbelieve it or notElmer's glue. With the "nose" of the glue bottle, I draw an outline of a shape that is supposed to look like a snowdrift or just something covered with snow, then fill it in with the glue. Then I let it dry. Then I put another layer on certain areas, and a third layer on a couple of them. I realized that since I am using paint instead of the previous cotton, the area will look flat. The glue "drifts" and piles are there to give it a little contour. Once I have them the way I want them, and they are dry, I will put a coat of white paint on them and then scatter that with various kinds of glitter. I have some white glitter from JoAnn that almost looks like flocking (great for snow!), a fine white glitter, and one small tube of white glitter that is in hexagon shape. (These are from the little six to four tube glitter sets JoAnn has in its dollar bins.) I don't want to waste the hexagon shape; it's a good highlight. I also just found that one of the collections has a glitter that looks like clear beads...may use a dribble of that, too.
15 October 2008
Operation Ceppo
I had to bring something downstairs to the "holiday closet" during lunchtime today and looked up to see the box with our "ceppo." You might call this an "Italian Christmas tree." Most ceppos are pyramid shaped, but this is an alternate style. A traditional ceppo usually has a Nativity scene on the largest level, and other levels contain food gifts and other little Christmas keepsakes, with candles on each level on each of the four corners.
This was the only Christmas decoration I put up the year my mom died.

We always put it in the den in the old house; the tree was upstairs in the living room, a room we seldom used unless we needed a book (the library was located there), had company, or at Christmas. The miniature tree on top was our tree downstairs in the den, where Bandit and later Pigwidgeon lived and where we spent all our time.
All the decorations on the ceppo were packed in a cardboard box with the ceppo, which I had built severalmaybe it's more like "many" since I'm pretty sure it's at least twelve years ago!years ago from two circular plaques 8 inches in diameter, one 6 inch diameter circular plaque, and a 1 inch diameter dowel cut into three pieces, after seeing a drawing of one in the book Celebrate the Wonder. I finished it right before Christmas, so never got a chance to paint it before it was time to decorate. You can tell in the photo that it is still "au natural."
And every year, instead of keeping it out to paint, I bundled it away immediately because it had to go to the very back of the top shelf of the little closet we used for the Christmas decorations if everything was to fit.
Seeing the box down in the new, larger closet, unencumbered and not containing anything but some silver tinsel rope and the little nativity figurines, made me think once more about painting it.
I decided to paint the bottom shelf white since the figures there are for a snow scene with St. Nicholas. The "snow" I had previously was made of cotton balls; I want to paint the lower level and then treat it with the three types of white glitter I have to simulate snow. The second level will be painted a sand color since that is where the little nativity set, a Hallmark miniature set which I bought one year at Thalls Pharmacy in Cranston, will go. I am thinking of getting some little trees or bushes to go in the rear to make it look more realistic. Since in the past two years I have put the ceppo on the china cabinet, where you can't see the top level, I could just paint that level white also, but should I find another place for it, I would love to put the angel and the star up there, as it used to be when I originally built it (before I had the miniatures tree on top). So I would want it blue for the sky.
My original thought was to paint the edges of the "rounds" and the vertical dowels in silver, to match the silver snowflakes I had around the top edge of the bottom level. Then I found a bottle of "Metallic Blue Pearl" from a previous project in my paint stash. I decided to use that for the top level and it is so lovely I want to use it for the edges and the verticals as well. The silver snowflakes will go perfectly with the silvery blue paint. I'll need to buy another bottle first, I think, as well as the sand-colored paint. So that's what this week's Michael's coupons will go for.
It will be odd to have it painted; it's been "natural" for so long! :-)
[Later: Well, cool! I may have enough of the blue after all...I'm crossing fingers. For the second level I painted the area that will be in the back a sage green I had, then dry-brushed a little brown and yellow on it so it would look like winter grass. At the front where the stable will be I mixed up "beachcomber beige" and "real brown" from my small set of Apple Barrel gloss paint set and made a sandy area, which I sprinkled with a little bronze glitter and a little gold glitter...not enough to make it glitzy, but just to give it a little shimmer where the Christ Child will be. (90 percent of it will be under the stable structure anyway!) Then I gave a first coat to the edge with the blue. It looks like I have enough for a second coat, which is all it may need.
Then all I need to do is put another coat of white on the bottom level and sprinkle it with the different white glitters.]
This was the only Christmas decoration I put up the year my mom died.

We always put it in the den in the old house; the tree was upstairs in the living room, a room we seldom used unless we needed a book (the library was located there), had company, or at Christmas. The miniature tree on top was our tree downstairs in the den, where Bandit and later Pigwidgeon lived and where we spent all our time.
All the decorations on the ceppo were packed in a cardboard box with the ceppo, which I had built severalmaybe it's more like "many" since I'm pretty sure it's at least twelve years ago!years ago from two circular plaques 8 inches in diameter, one 6 inch diameter circular plaque, and a 1 inch diameter dowel cut into three pieces, after seeing a drawing of one in the book Celebrate the Wonder. I finished it right before Christmas, so never got a chance to paint it before it was time to decorate. You can tell in the photo that it is still "au natural."
And every year, instead of keeping it out to paint, I bundled it away immediately because it had to go to the very back of the top shelf of the little closet we used for the Christmas decorations if everything was to fit.
Seeing the box down in the new, larger closet, unencumbered and not containing anything but some silver tinsel rope and the little nativity figurines, made me think once more about painting it.
I decided to paint the bottom shelf white since the figures there are for a snow scene with St. Nicholas. The "snow" I had previously was made of cotton balls; I want to paint the lower level and then treat it with the three types of white glitter I have to simulate snow. The second level will be painted a sand color since that is where the little nativity set, a Hallmark miniature set which I bought one year at Thalls Pharmacy in Cranston, will go. I am thinking of getting some little trees or bushes to go in the rear to make it look more realistic. Since in the past two years I have put the ceppo on the china cabinet, where you can't see the top level, I could just paint that level white also, but should I find another place for it, I would love to put the angel and the star up there, as it used to be when I originally built it (before I had the miniatures tree on top). So I would want it blue for the sky.
My original thought was to paint the edges of the "rounds" and the vertical dowels in silver, to match the silver snowflakes I had around the top edge of the bottom level. Then I found a bottle of "Metallic Blue Pearl" from a previous project in my paint stash. I decided to use that for the top level and it is so lovely I want to use it for the edges and the verticals as well. The silver snowflakes will go perfectly with the silvery blue paint. I'll need to buy another bottle first, I think, as well as the sand-colored paint. So that's what this week's Michael's coupons will go for.
It will be odd to have it painted; it's been "natural" for so long! :-)
[Later: Well, cool! I may have enough of the blue after all...I'm crossing fingers. For the second level I painted the area that will be in the back a sage green I had, then dry-brushed a little brown and yellow on it so it would look like winter grass. At the front where the stable will be I mixed up "beachcomber beige" and "real brown" from my small set of Apple Barrel gloss paint set and made a sandy area, which I sprinkled with a little bronze glitter and a little gold glitter...not enough to make it glitzy, but just to give it a little shimmer where the Christ Child will be. (90 percent of it will be under the stable structure anyway!) Then I gave a first coat to the edge with the blue. It looks like I have enough for a second coat, which is all it may need.
Then all I need to do is put another coat of white on the bottom level and sprinkle it with the different white glitters.]
Labels:
Christmas,
crafts,
decorating
08 October 2008
"The Leaves at Play"
Come and watch the merry little leaves at play:
Jolly times they're having this October day.
Down they gently flutter like the flakes of snow;
Chasing one another, flying to and fro.
Don't tell me they're only driven by the wind;
I am sure they 're doing just as they've a mind.
See those two go racing swiftly down the street!
Red 's ahead, now yellow, which think you will beat?
Over in that corner there's a dancing-class,
See them wildly waltzing o'er the withered grass.
They have lively music, led by Mr. Breeze,
Listen to his whistling up there in the trees.
Some have gone in swimming down in yonder nook,
See that host of bathers diving in the brook.
There a crowd has gathered in an eager talk,
Now they're widely scattered all along the walk.
So they gayly frolic through the sunny hours, .
Careless of the winter with its icy showers;
But the cold is coming, and the snow-drifts deep,
When, their playtime over, quietly they'll sleep.
. . . . . . D.C. Hasbrouck, St. Nicholas, October 1881
Jolly times they're having this October day.
Down they gently flutter like the flakes of snow;
Chasing one another, flying to and fro.
Don't tell me they're only driven by the wind;
I am sure they 're doing just as they've a mind.
See those two go racing swiftly down the street!
Red 's ahead, now yellow, which think you will beat?
Over in that corner there's a dancing-class,
See them wildly waltzing o'er the withered grass.
They have lively music, led by Mr. Breeze,
Listen to his whistling up there in the trees.
Some have gone in swimming down in yonder nook,
See that host of bathers diving in the brook.
There a crowd has gathered in an eager talk,
Now they're widely scattered all along the walk.
So they gayly frolic through the sunny hours, .
Careless of the winter with its icy showers;
But the cold is coming, and the snow-drifts deep,
When, their playtime over, quietly they'll sleep.
. . . . . . D.C. Hasbrouck, St. Nicholas, October 1881
05 October 2008
"Autumn"
Thou comest, Autumn, heralded by the rain,
With banners, by great gales incessant fanned,
Brighter than brightest silks of Samarcand,
And stately oxen harnessed to thy wain!
Thou standest, like imperial Charlemagne,
Upon thy bridge of gold; thy royal hand
Outstretched with benedictions o'er the land,
Blessing the farms through all thy vast domain!
Thy shield is the red harvest moon, suspended
So long beneath the heaven's o'er-hanging eaves;
Thy steps are by the farmer's prayers attended;
Like flames upon an altar shine the sheaves;
And, following thee, in thy ovation splendid,
Thine almoner, the wind, scatters the golden leaves!
. . . . Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
With banners, by great gales incessant fanned,
Brighter than brightest silks of Samarcand,
And stately oxen harnessed to thy wain!
Thou standest, like imperial Charlemagne,
Upon thy bridge of gold; thy royal hand
Outstretched with benedictions o'er the land,
Blessing the farms through all thy vast domain!
Thy shield is the red harvest moon, suspended
So long beneath the heaven's o'er-hanging eaves;
Thy steps are by the farmer's prayers attended;
Like flames upon an altar shine the sheaves;
And, following thee, in thy ovation splendid,
Thine almoner, the wind, scatters the golden leaves!
. . . . Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
03 October 2008
2008 Marietta Pilgrimage Home Tour
Woot! The homes being toured this year are on Whitlock Avenue. This used to be the "ritzy" area and the homes are all big Victorian/Queen Anne types with wraparound porches, chandeliers, and "all the trimmings," as they'd say in The Right Stuff. The Christmas decorations should be quite nice.
This year's tour is December 6-8. Tickets can be purchased at the Marietta Historical Society office at Marietta Square (it's not on the square; it's across from the train tracks, opposite the little engine and tender).
(Ah! And the Mistletoe Market is in two weeks at the Cobb County Civic Center. Why they hold the darn thing in October is a mystery, but...there it is...)
This year's tour is December 6-8. Tickets can be purchased at the Marietta Historical Society office at Marietta Square (it's not on the square; it's across from the train tracks, opposite the little engine and tender).
(Ah! And the Mistletoe Market is in two weeks at the Cobb County Civic Center. Why they hold the darn thing in October is a mystery, but...there it is...)
01 October 2008
A Site That Keeps Getting Better and Better
The Antique Christmas Lights Site
George Nelson adds more to this site every time I check on it. There's now a section on angel chimes, vintage advertising, reminisces by people who remember Christmas trees with candles and the arrival of the early lighting outfits, and more. You could literally spend days reading on this site.
George Nelson adds more to this site every time I check on it. There's now a section on angel chimes, vintage advertising, reminisces by people who remember Christmas trees with candles and the arrival of the early lighting outfits, and more. You could literally spend days reading on this site.
Labels:
Christmas,
decorating
17 September 2008
1920s Chic
Anyone remember Dennison? They were a paper company out of Massachusetts which was bought out by Avery awhile back. The main thing I remember Dennison for was stickers ("gummed seals" as they called them back then); they had all kinds. I bought some of their dog stickers just to get the collies. :-) In the 1910s and 1920s, however, they were also famous for selling all kinds of crepe paper (not just streamers) for use in holiday decorating and even for making temporary costumes for parties and playlets that children could put on. They would come out with yearly booklets, the "Bogie Book" at Hallowe'en and the Christmas Book, to give you ideas for decorating using their paper products. These booklets are rare today because folks just tossed them out after the holiday and now they sell for $$$ on e-Bay.
Well, some kind soul scanned one of the Christmas books from 1922 and it is linked at Google books:
Dennison Christmas Book
Really neat look back at was considered "trendy" back then in decorating for the holidays; also interesting to see party game suggestionsand 1920s price list as well!
Well, some kind soul scanned one of the Christmas books from 1922 and it is linked at Google books:
Dennison Christmas Book
Really neat look back at was considered "trendy" back then in decorating for the holidays; also interesting to see party game suggestionsand 1920s price list as well!
09 September 2008
God Rest Me Merry
If you walk by my cubicle today you will find me playing Christmas music. Why? Well, because I just bought the three-CD set and didn't want to wait to listen to it? :-) This is the O'Neill brothers music, piano instrumentals, which I bought at the Yellow Daisy Festival on Sunday. Already finished playing their "Autumn" album.
Besides, it's end of fiscal year and I need something to cheer me up!
Besides, it's end of fiscal year and I need something to cheer me up!
10 August 2008
21 July 2008
Christmas in July
Some Christmas specials online:
This is an odd one: 1970s effort about aliens coming to earth and finding out what Christmas is all about. The animation makes the aliens look like ethereal wise men.
A Cosmic Christmas
Another animated curiosity from the early days of video games:
Christmas Comes to Pac-Land
Produced by the Mormon church:
Mr. Krueger's Christmas
The Emmy award-winning animated special done in the style of Victorian illustrations:
A Christmas Carol
Some network standards, available for purchase on DVD:
How the Grinch Stole Christmas
A Charlie Brown Christmas
A Garfield Christmas
Christmas crackers from the British:
Merry Christmas, Mr. Bean
Vicar of Dibley: "The Christmas Lunch Incident"
A blast from the past:
Bob Hope Christmas Pacific Tour 1958
This is an odd one: 1970s effort about aliens coming to earth and finding out what Christmas is all about. The animation makes the aliens look like ethereal wise men.
A Cosmic Christmas
Another animated curiosity from the early days of video games:
Christmas Comes to Pac-Land
Produced by the Mormon church:
Mr. Krueger's Christmas
The Emmy award-winning animated special done in the style of Victorian illustrations:
A Christmas Carol
Some network standards, available for purchase on DVD:
How the Grinch Stole Christmas
A Charlie Brown Christmas
A Garfield Christmas
Christmas crackers from the British:
Merry Christmas, Mr. Bean
Vicar of Dibley: "The Christmas Lunch Incident"
A blast from the past:
Bob Hope Christmas Pacific Tour 1958
Labels:
Christmas stories
The Origins of Christmas
So today I was searching for the "Children in Need" Doctor Who specials, made a turn at Christmas, and discovered that last year the BBC made a special about the Dickensian origins of Christmas. Here's the article from the "Radio Times":
Griff Rhys Jones on the Dickensian Christmas
And here's the special, in two parts...not sure why it's on a Japanese site:
Charles Dickens and the Invention of Christmas, part 1
Charles Dickens and the Invention of Christmas, part 2
And here are several other documentaries on the origins of Christmas that I'd never seen:
The Origins of Christmas
The Unwrapping of Christmas: Its History, Myths, & Traditions (The hostess says this is one hour, but only 31 minutes of video are posted)
Beyond Today: "Christmas, Mirth or Myth?"
Griff Rhys Jones on the Dickensian Christmas
And here's the special, in two parts...not sure why it's on a Japanese site:
Charles Dickens and the Invention of Christmas, part 1
Charles Dickens and the Invention of Christmas, part 2
And here are several other documentaries on the origins of Christmas that I'd never seen:
The Origins of Christmas
The Unwrapping of Christmas: Its History, Myths, & Traditions (The hostess says this is one hour, but only 31 minutes of video are posted)
Beyond Today: "Christmas, Mirth or Myth?"
Labels:
Christmas documentaries
06 July 2008
24 June 2008
The 2008 Hallmark Christmas Dream Book
Ornament Catalog
Particularly noted: a very nice Father Christmas, page 5; very pretty shell remembrance ornament, page 9; two new Rudolph and Grinch ornaments, page 15 (should get a Grinch for the library tree); a CLASSIC Ernest Shepard Pooh ornament, page 33 (much more appropriate for the library tree than the Disney version) and also some bears reading "A Visit from St. Nicholas"; Snoopy and the "beagle scouts"too cute!, page 47; a Mach Five!, page 49; a new Lady and Tramp, page 50; a ViewMaster and a jukebox that plays swing music, page 57; a Jonny Quest ornament!!!!, page 63; a Star Trek communicator and a very realistic Indiana Jones, page 65; the Canadian Santa, page 70. There are, of course, ornaments for High School Musical, Hannah Montana, Pirates of the Caribbean, WALL-E, and other hot items as well.
Particularly noted: a very nice Father Christmas, page 5; very pretty shell remembrance ornament, page 9; two new Rudolph and Grinch ornaments, page 15 (should get a Grinch for the library tree); a CLASSIC Ernest Shepard Pooh ornament, page 33 (much more appropriate for the library tree than the Disney version) and also some bears reading "A Visit from St. Nicholas"; Snoopy and the "beagle scouts"too cute!, page 47; a Mach Five!, page 49; a new Lady and Tramp, page 50; a ViewMaster and a jukebox that plays swing music, page 57; a Jonny Quest ornament!!!!, page 63; a Star Trek communicator and a very realistic Indiana Jones, page 65; the Canadian Santa, page 70. There are, of course, ornaments for High School Musical, Hannah Montana, Pirates of the Caribbean, WALL-E, and other hot items as well.
Labels:
Christmas
10 April 2008
CHRISTMAS BOOKS REVIEWS
AMC Greatest Christmas Movies, Frank Thompson
I would have had this book read before now, but it came to me in dreadful shape; I got it from a used bookstore and found it with water damage. I'd avoided buying this one full price because I didn't want to put profit into the hands of the idiots who cancelled Remember WENN. Not a very charitable thought about a Christmas book.
As a volume that examines Christmas movies, it has its good points and its bad points. One positive point is that it addresses silent Christmas films, which other Christmas film books usually ignore. There are also extended chapters about A Christmas Story and Christmas Vacation, although some of the material is a bit tedious. The volume also has the advantage of nice stills from the movies it does cover. On the other hand, many well-loved Christmas films are completely ignored, and in a short commentary on classic Christmas television fare, only A Charlie Brown Christmas and How the Grinch Stole Christmas are acknowledgedthe omission of Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer is inexcusable. Not to mention this is yet another Christmas book that covers Christmas horror films in depth. IMHO, "Christmas" and "horror" should never be uttered in the same breath.
Christmas in Connecticut, Diane Smith
I found this on remainder, a lovely oversized coffee table book filled with stories about various celebrations, exhibits and displays across the state of Connecticut. About half the book is lovely photos of Christmas decorations and displays, and just plain landscapes covered in snow. Gorgeous.
I would have had this book read before now, but it came to me in dreadful shape; I got it from a used bookstore and found it with water damage. I'd avoided buying this one full price because I didn't want to put profit into the hands of the idiots who cancelled Remember WENN. Not a very charitable thought about a Christmas book.
As a volume that examines Christmas movies, it has its good points and its bad points. One positive point is that it addresses silent Christmas films, which other Christmas film books usually ignore. There are also extended chapters about A Christmas Story and Christmas Vacation, although some of the material is a bit tedious. The volume also has the advantage of nice stills from the movies it does cover. On the other hand, many well-loved Christmas films are completely ignored, and in a short commentary on classic Christmas television fare, only A Charlie Brown Christmas and How the Grinch Stole Christmas are acknowledgedthe omission of Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer is inexcusable. Not to mention this is yet another Christmas book that covers Christmas horror films in depth. IMHO, "Christmas" and "horror" should never be uttered in the same breath.
Christmas in Connecticut, Diane Smith
I found this on remainder, a lovely oversized coffee table book filled with stories about various celebrations, exhibits and displays across the state of Connecticut. About half the book is lovely photos of Christmas decorations and displays, and just plain landscapes covered in snow. Gorgeous.
Labels:
books,
Christmas,
Christmas book review
06 April 2008
Elves, Fairies and...Convicts?
Did anyone catch this film, North Station (also known as Station Norda shot of the DVD) last fall? I have been hoping it would make the rounds again so I could catch the whole thing. It wasn't broadcast on any of the regular movie channels, but showed up on Film Festival or Family Room (I can't recall) on the VOOM HD channels that we get. I saw the end of it one time, the middle, the beginning...never all at once, which made it hard to get a handle on this very strange Quebec-made Christmas fantasy.
The story concerns young Samuel, who has been sent to live with his uncle at North Station, the last stop on the railway before the North Pole. Samuel's late uncle always prepared responses to children's letters to Santa, and this year Samuel and young Evelyne, whom Samuel is developing a crush on, decide to answer the letters themselves. However, they fall asleep in the middle of the task, but miraculously the letters are all answered and ready.
Samuel leaves to take the letters to the post office, but is caught in a blizzard and lays dying in the forest. Howie, a little African boy in Moorish dress captures Samuel's last breath in a bottle and takes Samuel to the North Pole, where he is revived and meets Santa Claus and also Bianca, the beautiful fairy who lives there (perhaps this is some French version of the Santa/St. Nicholas story?Bianca doesn't appear to be "Mrs. Claus"). Samuel is captivated by the workings of Santa's workshop around him, so Santa makes him an offer: since Samuel's last breath is still trapped in the bottle, he can remain at the North Pole and become one of the helpers himself. But in return for staying alive, he must relinquish all his memories, including of Evelyne. Samuel does so and soon becomes a trusted helper. The bottle with his last breath is stored in a vault with those of others who Santa has rescued from death and who are now his helpers (you can tell all of Santa's helpers because they all have sparkly eyebrows, as Samuel is given).
Those are only a few of the strange things about this movie. Another odd thing involves the reindeer: when they draw Santa's sleigh they are actual, physical reindeer, but when they are off-duty, they revert into people. They are in fact convicts who are working off their debt to society and when they are not drawing the sleigh they are usually quarreling. The elves use them several times to make deliveries to North Station and you see them singing carols in the background, wearing unusual clothing.
Anyway, some time in the future, Santa receives a letter from a little girl whose grandmother is sick. She asks Santa for helpand it turns out "Grandmother" is a grown-up Evelyne.
There are more facets to the plot than this, but since I never saw it all in one go I never did figure out what was going on at certain points. There are a couple of segments where Santa plucks people from various points on earth and gives them courage before returning them to their home, and at the end Bianca grows weak and ill, but I never found out why. Another part of the story involves a plump, resentful elf named Cathy who was banished to work in the kitchens because she accidentally broke a couple of the bottles containing peoples' last breaths. I never found out if it was possibly Cathy who made Bianca ill or not.
Someday I hope to see it from beginning to end to see if I can get the plot straight! :-)
The story concerns young Samuel, who has been sent to live with his uncle at North Station, the last stop on the railway before the North Pole. Samuel's late uncle always prepared responses to children's letters to Santa, and this year Samuel and young Evelyne, whom Samuel is developing a crush on, decide to answer the letters themselves. However, they fall asleep in the middle of the task, but miraculously the letters are all answered and ready.
Samuel leaves to take the letters to the post office, but is caught in a blizzard and lays dying in the forest. Howie, a little African boy in Moorish dress captures Samuel's last breath in a bottle and takes Samuel to the North Pole, where he is revived and meets Santa Claus and also Bianca, the beautiful fairy who lives there (perhaps this is some French version of the Santa/St. Nicholas story?Bianca doesn't appear to be "Mrs. Claus"). Samuel is captivated by the workings of Santa's workshop around him, so Santa makes him an offer: since Samuel's last breath is still trapped in the bottle, he can remain at the North Pole and become one of the helpers himself. But in return for staying alive, he must relinquish all his memories, including of Evelyne. Samuel does so and soon becomes a trusted helper. The bottle with his last breath is stored in a vault with those of others who Santa has rescued from death and who are now his helpers (you can tell all of Santa's helpers because they all have sparkly eyebrows, as Samuel is given).
Those are only a few of the strange things about this movie. Another odd thing involves the reindeer: when they draw Santa's sleigh they are actual, physical reindeer, but when they are off-duty, they revert into people. They are in fact convicts who are working off their debt to society and when they are not drawing the sleigh they are usually quarreling. The elves use them several times to make deliveries to North Station and you see them singing carols in the background, wearing unusual clothing.
Anyway, some time in the future, Santa receives a letter from a little girl whose grandmother is sick. She asks Santa for helpand it turns out "Grandmother" is a grown-up Evelyne.
There are more facets to the plot than this, but since I never saw it all in one go I never did figure out what was going on at certain points. There are a couple of segments where Santa plucks people from various points on earth and gives them courage before returning them to their home, and at the end Bianca grows weak and ill, but I never found out why. Another part of the story involves a plump, resentful elf named Cathy who was banished to work in the kitchens because she accidentally broke a couple of the bottles containing peoples' last breaths. I never found out if it was possibly Cathy who made Bianca ill or not.
Someday I hope to see it from beginning to end to see if I can get the plot straight! :-)
01 April 2008
CHRISTMAS BOOKS REVIEW (and Another Holiday Offering)
(books from remainder tables after Christmas and just a couple not read during Christmastide...)
Re-read: The Story of Holly and Ivy, Rumer Godden
Ivy, an orphan girl who has made up a fantasy for herself about spending the holiday with her "grandmother" instead being sent to the Infants' Home for Christmas, disembarks from the train in the town of Aylesbury, looking for her fictional grandmother, and sees a beautiful Christmas doll in a toy shop window. Like Ivy, Holly the doll is wishing for a real home, and is in terror that she will have to stay at the toyshop with the evil stuffed owl Abracadabra glaring at her forever. How they both find a home is the tale told in this charming book. If you saw the movie supposedly "based" upon this story (The Wish That Saved Christmas), pick up the book instead; it's a classic of love and faith...but mostly it's about wishing, and how wishes sometimes come true.
Re-read: The Homecoming, Earl Hamner
The book that inspired the classic television special first broadcast in 1971. What you will read is the original story about the Spencer (not Walton) family, which, besides the difference in names, presents a slightly darker tale, but not in an unsavory wayjust a more accurate portrait of the often grim lives of Appalachian families in the 1930s that were warmed by family and love. Even if you've watched the television movie for years, this story will provide fresh insights.
11 Days in December, Stanley Weintraub
Weintraub seems to be making a career of telling military Christmas tales: this follows his books about the World War I Christmas truce and about George Washington's Christmas farewell to his troops. This is his story of the Battle of the Bulge and the men who combated the last desperate push of the German army. Includes the true story of General George Patton's outrageous appeal to God before the battle. Great book for history buffs, especially WWII aficionados.
God Rest Ye Merry, Soldiers, James McIvor
A wartime Christmas book not written by Stanley Weintraub, this slim volume talks about the American Civil War and how celebrations during the war led to a change in how Americans celebrated Christmas. The central chapters of the books are filled with diary entries and information gleaned from contemporary journals about the experiences of both Union and Confederate on the battlefield.
Santa's North Pole Cookbook, Jeff Guinn
Guinn's characters in his "Santa Claus" trilogy supply their favorite recipes. A nice variety of ethnic dishes and a good mixture of sweets and savories.
Once Upon a Christmas, James Dillet Freeman
These are chiefly religious-themed short stories about Christmas, some fanciful,some true-to-life, viewing the Nativity from different points-of-view (the stable animals, a scarecrow, and Joseph, just to name a few), with several others about family miracles at Christmastime, including the amazing story of a boy who rescues an angel with a broken wing. If you are looking for a collection of non-run-of-the-mill Christmas stories, you may enjoy this volume.
Christmas by the Hearth, anthology, Tyndale Books
A collection of inspiring short stories for the holidays, from classics like "The Little Match Girl" and "The Gift of the Magi" to modern-day tales of faith in the vein of Chicken Soup for the Soul to stories based on old Christmas legends, like that of the Christ Child who arrives unawares. One story involves the reminisces of an older woman who we realize at the end of the story is a famous 19th century author. The collection is further enhanced with attractive pages that include black-and-white sketchwork.
and
Hanukkah, Schmanukkah!, Esmé Raji Codell and LeUyen Pham
What if someone wrote a Jewish version of A Christmas Carol? Although it sounds improbable, the story is given an interesting treatment in this picture book for older children and adults, about a penny-pinching, embittered New York City sweatshop owner who pushes his impoverished employees to the edge. Nicely tells the story of Jewish immigration to the United States and the hardships faced by those who left the old country for "the streets paved with gold." The color illustrations perfectly capture the mood of the story.
Re-read: The Story of Holly and Ivy, Rumer Godden
Ivy, an orphan girl who has made up a fantasy for herself about spending the holiday with her "grandmother" instead being sent to the Infants' Home for Christmas, disembarks from the train in the town of Aylesbury, looking for her fictional grandmother, and sees a beautiful Christmas doll in a toy shop window. Like Ivy, Holly the doll is wishing for a real home, and is in terror that she will have to stay at the toyshop with the evil stuffed owl Abracadabra glaring at her forever. How they both find a home is the tale told in this charming book. If you saw the movie supposedly "based" upon this story (The Wish That Saved Christmas), pick up the book instead; it's a classic of love and faith...but mostly it's about wishing, and how wishes sometimes come true.
Re-read: The Homecoming, Earl Hamner
The book that inspired the classic television special first broadcast in 1971. What you will read is the original story about the Spencer (not Walton) family, which, besides the difference in names, presents a slightly darker tale, but not in an unsavory wayjust a more accurate portrait of the often grim lives of Appalachian families in the 1930s that were warmed by family and love. Even if you've watched the television movie for years, this story will provide fresh insights.
11 Days in December, Stanley Weintraub
Weintraub seems to be making a career of telling military Christmas tales: this follows his books about the World War I Christmas truce and about George Washington's Christmas farewell to his troops. This is his story of the Battle of the Bulge and the men who combated the last desperate push of the German army. Includes the true story of General George Patton's outrageous appeal to God before the battle. Great book for history buffs, especially WWII aficionados.
God Rest Ye Merry, Soldiers, James McIvor
A wartime Christmas book not written by Stanley Weintraub, this slim volume talks about the American Civil War and how celebrations during the war led to a change in how Americans celebrated Christmas. The central chapters of the books are filled with diary entries and information gleaned from contemporary journals about the experiences of both Union and Confederate on the battlefield.
Santa's North Pole Cookbook, Jeff Guinn
Guinn's characters in his "Santa Claus" trilogy supply their favorite recipes. A nice variety of ethnic dishes and a good mixture of sweets and savories.
Once Upon a Christmas, James Dillet Freeman
These are chiefly religious-themed short stories about Christmas, some fanciful,some true-to-life, viewing the Nativity from different points-of-view (the stable animals, a scarecrow, and Joseph, just to name a few), with several others about family miracles at Christmastime, including the amazing story of a boy who rescues an angel with a broken wing. If you are looking for a collection of non-run-of-the-mill Christmas stories, you may enjoy this volume.
Christmas by the Hearth, anthology, Tyndale Books
A collection of inspiring short stories for the holidays, from classics like "The Little Match Girl" and "The Gift of the Magi" to modern-day tales of faith in the vein of Chicken Soup for the Soul to stories based on old Christmas legends, like that of the Christ Child who arrives unawares. One story involves the reminisces of an older woman who we realize at the end of the story is a famous 19th century author. The collection is further enhanced with attractive pages that include black-and-white sketchwork.
and
Hanukkah, Schmanukkah!, Esmé Raji Codell and LeUyen Pham
What if someone wrote a Jewish version of A Christmas Carol? Although it sounds improbable, the story is given an interesting treatment in this picture book for older children and adults, about a penny-pinching, embittered New York City sweatshop owner who pushes his impoverished employees to the edge. Nicely tells the story of Jewish immigration to the United States and the hardships faced by those who left the old country for "the streets paved with gold." The color illustrations perfectly capture the mood of the story.
Labels:
children,
Christmas,
Christmas book review,
Hanukkah,
history
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