28 December 2023

Heartwarming Essays and Short Stories

CHRISTMAS BOOK REVIEW
Fifty Years of Christmas. edited by Ruth M. Elmquist
This is a charming vintage book of poetry, short stories, and essays from the "Christian Herald" from 1901 to 1950. Sounds preachy, you think? Well, although many of the essays and some of the stories involved the Nativity, this collection is no didactic, gloomy collection. In fact, one of them is the sweetest love story ("There Was a Star") about a man who has loved a woman all his life, but believes she is in love with his brother.

Dorothy Canfield Fisher talks about traditions in "This Must We Keep." Men in a World War II prisoner of war camp, enemies and friends, come together in "The Hour of Stars." An embittered newspaper owner finds Christmas in "A Good-Willer." Edgar A. Guest's touching poem "On Going Home for Christmas" is followed by his essay "I'm at My Best at Christmas!" which tells how he wrote the verse. "Christmas on Beacon Hill" talks about a candle-lighting custom in Boston which I wonder if is still done. And there are so many more heartwarming ones!

It's nice to go back to time when essays and stories were thoughtfully written for adults, and not just "sound bites" in juvenile-vocabulary-ridden tales from the internet in between intrusive advertisements. I like being treated like an adult.

27 December 2023

The Famous History of the Famous Poem

CHRISTMAS BOOK REVIEW
Twas The Night: The Art and History of the Classic Christmas Poem, written and compiled by Pamela McColl
This is a big, beautiful "coffee-table book" published on the 200th anniversary of the writing/publishing of the classic "A Visit from St. Nicholas." It talks at first of the history of the Christmas celebration as well as the history of St. Nicholas, then switches to the history of Santa Claus in New York, a tale that pivots upon Washington Irving, who in his farcial history of the city, declared that St. Nicholas was the patron saint of the city formerly known as New Amsterdam.

Nor was Clement C. Moore the first person who talked about "Santa Claus" or his flying about in the sky. Indeed, there is still contention by the family of Henry Livingston, Jr., that he is the actual author of the poem, but the proof was lost in a house fire. (Author McColl talks about these theories, but believes the author is Moore.)

This is a neat book with a lot of historical information, but the author wanders far afield of the poem itself, quoting historical figures about Christmas celebrations but not necessarily citing Moore's poem. Still, the illustrations, of Santa Claus and of Christmas in general, are gorgeous, with many full page and half page color illustrations of paintings, advertisements, and magazine illustrations. I bought it at fifty percent off; you might want to find a bargain copy.

24 December 2023

Poetry for Christmas: "Christmas Eve"

by Faith Baldwin

The snow is full of silver light
Spilled from the heavens' tilted cup
And, on this holy, tranquil night,
The eyes of men are lifted up
To see the promise written fair,
The hope of peace for all on earth,
And hear the singing bells declare
The marvel of the dear Christ's birth.
The way from year to year is long
And though the road be dark so far,
Bright is the manger, sweet is the song,
The steeple rises to the Star.

22 December 2023

Romance for Christmas

CHRISTMAS BOOK REVIEW
Lovelight Farms, B.K. Borison
Stella Bloom had a bleak childhood; daughter of a philandering husband, her mother never recovered from being abandoned by her lover; subsequently she grew up learning not to count on people who might abandon you. When her mother died, she accidentally met Luka Peters, a statistician. Luka becomes her best friend, supporting her dreams when she bought a local Christmas tree farm, the one place where she was truly happy. But due to recent setbacks, she's afraid she might lose the farm and is afraid to tell her employees. Instead, she concocts a plan to win a prize with an internet influencer to fund the farm further.

Unfortunately, she told the influencer she and her boyfriend ran the farm. So she asks Luka to be her "temporary boyfriend."

You guessed it, these two "best friends" have been in love all during their ten-year friendship. Luka seems amenable to admitting it, but due to her trust issues Stella thinks its better to leave the status at quo.

This is a sweet Hallmark-type romance taking place in a very accepting small town (no one cares, for example, that the sheriff is hoping to be in a same-sex relationship) and Luka is a very appealing lead male character—he even cooks, and his Italian mom, who appears all too briefly, is a hoot. Stella, however seems to be a perpetual child, frightened of any commitment fearing her life will end up like her mother's (one actually wants to bonk her mom for basically allowing Stella's deadbeat dad to ruin her life). Basically the story is 300 pages of their yearning for each other.

Some good things: the farm manager, Beckett, is a hoot: a tough guy who's a sucker for kittens. Lovelight Farms' Christmas sounds like a dream. No one likes Stella's deadbeat dad. Some bad things: there's yet another best-friend-is-a-dreamy-baker (both in her looks and her baking). The yearning goes on so, so, so long.

The sex scenes are pretty good. A nice Christmas story if you don't expect much.

21 December 2023

Poetry for Christmas: "The Shortest Day"

Happy Winter Solstice!

by Susan Cooper

And so the Shortest Day came and the year died
And everywhere down the centuries of the snow-white world
Came people singing, dancing,
To drive the dark away.
They lighted candles in the winter trees;
They hung their homes with evergreen;
They burned beseeching fires all night long
To keep the year alive.
And when the new year’s sunshine blazed awake
They shouted, reveling.
Through all the frosty ages you can hear them
Echoing behind us—listen!
All the long echoes, sing the same delight,
This Shortest Day,
As promise wakens in the sleeping land:
They carol, feast, give thanks,
And dearly love their friends,
And hope for peace.
And now so do we, here, now,
This year and every year.

Welcome, Yule!

20 December 2023

Poetry for Christmas: "A Song for a Christmas Tree"

by Louisa May Alcott

Cold and wintry is the sky,
Bitter winds go whistling by,
Orchard boughs are bare and dry,
Yet here stands a faithful tree.
Household fairies kind and dear,
With loving magic none need fear,
Bade it rise and blossom here,
Little friends, for you and me.

Come and gather as they fall,
Shining gifts for great and small;
Santa Claus remembers all
When he comes with goodies piled.
Corn and candy, apples red,
Sugar horses, gingerbread,
Babies who are never fed,
Are handing here for every child.

Shake the boughs and down they come,
Better fruit than peach or plum,
'T is our little harvest home;
For though frosts the flowers kill,
Though birds depart and squirrels sleep,
Though snows may gather cold and deep,
Little folks their sunshine keep,
And mother-love makes summer still.

Gathered in a smiling ring,
Lightly dance and gayly sing,
Still at heart remembering
The sweet story all should know,
Of the little Child whose birth
Has made this day throughout the earth
A festival for childish mirth,
Since the first Christmas long ago.


18 December 2023

The Belgian Detective Sees It Through

CHRISTMAS BOOK REVIEW
Hercule Poirot's Christmas, Agatha Christie
Simeon Lee has a fiendish plan for Christmas: invite all his family, including his estranged sons, to a family reunion. Already home caring for him is his stolid son Alfred and his wife Lydia. Visiting will be George (the cheap one) with his spendthrift wife Magdalene, the artistic David and his wife Hilda who hopes seeing his father will destroy his demons, and his granddaughter Pilar (child of his deceased daughter). Also visiting is Stephen Farr, son of his old partner in his diamond mines day. Simone plans to torment his children with talk about changing his will—but before he can plot any further, he's murdered in a welter of blood in...guess what...a locked room.

Luckily Hercule Poirot is staying nearby with his friend Colonel Johnson (and despairing the lack of central heating). They soon determine that, despite what George keeps wittering about "lunatics" entering the house to kill his father, the culprit must be homegrown. But everyone has a reason for hating Simeon Lee, so the suspects are unlimited.

I know Christie's reputation, and this one doesn't disappoint. The guests don't even get a chance to see the Christmas decorations before the dirty deed is done (not that dad doesn't really deserve it). I had several suspects...and never guessed the real one!

Not much Yuletide cheer, but a nice solid mystery.

15 December 2023

Scrooge, Pickwick, and Other Fellows

CHRISTMAS BOOK REVIEW
Dickens' Christmas, compiled by John Hudson
This is one of the Sutton Christmas anthologies that is not concentrated on a certain shire, but a certain era, and contains compilations from mostly Charles Dickens' Christmas writings (chiefly A Christmas Carol, but also from his monthly magazine "Household Words"), but also has Dickens' era offerings, including the tale of an ordinary man who got himself assigned to one of the terrible workhouses and revealed the crowded and smelly living conditions and meager meals (at one point he says that a candle dipped in boiling water would probably provide more nutrition than the food that was fed the paupers). There's an excerpt from Washington Irving's "Bracebridge Hall" quintet of stories, the scathing poem "Song of the Shirt" about a poor woman receiving hardly enough money from sewing rich people's garments to feed herself, several other workhouse accounts, a lively account of how to give a children's party, and lots of woodcuts and engravings for the era.

I would say pick this one up at a good library book sale.

Poetry for Christmas: "Triolet"

by F. W. Harvey

Winter has hardened all the ground,
     But flowers are on the window pane;
No others are there to be found;
     Winter has hardened all the ground.

But here, while earth is bare and bound,
     Bloom ghosts of those his frost has slain
Winter has hardened all the ground,
     But flowers are on the window pane.

13 December 2023

Poetry for Christmas: "Singing in the Streets"

by Leonard Clark

I had almost forgotten the singing in the streets
Snow piled up by the houses, drifting
Underneath the door into the warm room,
Firelight, lamplight, the little lame cat
Dreaming in soft sleep on the hearth, mother dozing,
Waiting for Christmas to come, the boys and me
Trudging over blanket fields waving lanterns to the sky.
I had almost forgotten the smell, the feel of it all,
The coming back home, with girls laughing like stars,
Their cheeks, holly berries, me kissing one,
Silent-tongued, soberly, by the long church wall;
Then back to the kitchen table, supper on the white cloth,
Cheese, bread, the home-made wine;
Symbols of the night's joy, a whole feast.
And I wonder now, years gone, mother gone,
The boys and girls scattered, drifted away with the snow flakes,
Lamplight done, firelight over,
If the sounds of our singing in the streets are still there,
Those old tunes, still praising;
And now, a life-time of Decembers away from it all,
A branch of remembering holly spears my cheeks,
And I think it may be so;
Yes, I believe it may be so.

12 December 2023

Christmas in the Forest of Dean

CHRISTMAS BOOK REVIEW
A Forest Christmas
compiled by Humphrey Phelps

Alan Sutton Publishing has a series of these "Christmas anthologies," the first which I bought at a book sale several years ago, and I try to pick up inexpensive copies when I can find them. Most of them concentrate on a certain shire or area in England (there are a handful, like A Dickens Christmas, A Wartime Christmas, and A Bronte Christmas that are set around a historic era instead).

This is one of my favorites, with many reminisces from adults who grew up in the Forest of Dean, and the simple gifts children received back then (at least a dozen stories talk about kids getting "an apple, an orange [very rare back then], a penny, some type of simple candy [not chocolate], and maybe a small toy"). One girl even remembered receiving a doll cradle although she had no doll. Also talk about special years when there was snow, or the family received a special meat to have with dinner. of course stirring the Christmas pudding! There are two excellent verses as well, and some sobering posts about the workhouse.

All illustrated with vintage drawings, maps, placards, photographs, and more.

05 December 2023

Behind the Scenes at a Christimas Favorite

CHRISTMAS BOOK REVIEW
Charlie Brown's Christmas Miracle: The Inspiring, Untold Story of the Making of a Holiday Classic
, Michael Keane
There's another "making of" book about A Charlie Brown Christmas, but this one has a novel tack: tracking the different personalities who combined to bring the unconventional special to the screen: of course the creator of "Peanuts," Charles Schulz, a quiet man with unresolved fears who didn't believe an animated version of his strip would work; Bill Melendez, the head of a small animation studio who had trained with Disney and worked at Warner Brothers; Lee Mendelson, the producer, fearful of the reception of a special presentation that was worked up in only six months; and more, including Neil Reagan, the older brother of Ronald Reagan, who worked for the advertising agency that envisioned a Christmas special for Coca-Cola, and Frank Stanton, the head of CBS, who, along with his other executives, didn't know what to make of this thirty minutes of odd animation, strange jazz music, and inexperienced children's voices.

Sometimes there's almost too much detail of all these people in the background, like Marion Harper at McCann-Erickson—I would have liked to have seen a lot more about the child actors—but there are some great details I didn't know, such as Vince Guaraldi's work with an Episcopal cathedral that helped him be chosen to do the music (along with a chance close encounter listening to music in the car). (I also didn't realize one of the nominees running against A Charlie Brown Christmas for an Emmy award for Children's Special in 1965 was my beloved Gallegher!)

Despite the almost minute details losing the thread of the narrative occasionally, this is a neat book for anyone who loves A Charlie Brown Christmas and doesn't realize how ground breaking it was for 1965.

03 December 2023

Poetry for Christmas: "The Shepherd's Calendar: December"

by John Clare

Glad Christmas comes, and every hearth
   Makes room to give him welcome now,
E’en want will dry its tears in mirth,
   And crown him with a holly bough;
Though tramping ’neath a winter sky,
   O’er snowy paths and rimy stiles,
The housewife sets her spinning by
   To bid him welcome with her smiles.

Each house is swept the day before,
   And windows stuck with ever-greens,              
The snow is besom’d from the door,
And comfort crowns the cottage scenes.
Gilt holly, with its thorny pricks,
   And yew and box, with berries small,
These deck the unused candlesticks,
   And pictures hanging by the wall.

Neighbours resume their annual cheer,
   Wishing, with smiles and spirits high,
Glad Christmas and a happy year,
   To every morning passer-by;                      
Milkmaids their Christmas journeys go,
   Accompanied with favour’d swain;
And children pace the crumping snow,
   To taste their granny’s cake again.

The shepherd, now no more afraid,
   Since custom doth the chance bestow,
Starts up to kiss the giggling maid
   Beneath the branch of misletoe
That ’neath each cottage beam is seen,
   With pearl-like berries shining gay;            
The shadow still of what hath been,
   Which fashion yearly fades away.

The singing wates, a merry throng,
   At early morn, with simple skill,
Yet imitate the angels song,
   And chant their Christmas ditty still;
And, ’mid the storm that dies and swells
   By fits—in hummings softly steals
The music of the village bells,
   Ringing round their merry peals.
                                         
When this is past, a merry crew,
   Bedeck’d in masks and ribbons gay,
The “Morris-dance,” their sports renew,
   And act their winter evening play.
The clown turn’d king, for penny-praise,
   Storms with the actor’s strut and swell;
And Harlequin, a laugh to raise,
   Wears his hunch-back and tinkling bell.

And oft for pence and spicy ale,
   With winter nosegays pinn’d before,              
The wassail-singer tells her tale,
   And drawls her Christmas carols o’er.
While ’prentice boy, with ruddy face,
   And rime-bepowder’d, dancing locks,
From door to door with happy pace,
   Runs round to claim his “Christmas box.”

The block upon the fire is put,
   To sanction custom’s old desires;
And many a fagot's bands are cut,
   For the old farmers’ Christmas fires;            
Where loud-tongued Gladness joins the throng,
   And Winter meets the warmth of May,
Till feeling soon the heat too strong,
   He rubs his shins, and draws away.

While snows the window-panes bedim,
   The fire curls up a sunny charm,
Where, creaming o’er the pitcher’s rim,
   The flowering ale is set to warm;
Mirth, full of joy as summer bees,
   Sits there, its pleasures to impart,            
And children, ’tween their parent’s knees,
   Sing scraps of carols o’er by heart.

And some, to view the winter weathers,
   Climb up the window-seat with glee,
Likening the snow to falling feathers,
   In Fancy’s infant ecstasy;
Laughing, with superstitious love,
   O’er visions wild that youth supplies,
Of people pulling geese above,
   And keeping Christmas in the skies.              

As tho’ the homestead trees were drest,
   In lieu of snow, with dancing leaves;
As tho’ the sun-dried martin’s nest,
   Instead of i’cles hung the eaves;
The children hail the happy day—
   As if the snow were April’s grass,
And pleas’d, as ’neath the warmth of May,
   Sport o’er the water froze to glass.

Thou day of happy sound and mirth,
   That long with childish memory stays,            
How blest around the cottage hearth
   I met thee in my younger days!
Harping, with rapture’s dreaming joys,
   On presents which thy coming found,
The welcome sight of little toys,
   The Christmas gift of cousins round.

The wooden horse with arching head,
   Drawn upon wheels around the room;
The gilded coach of gingerbread,
   And many-colour’d sugar plum;                    
Gilt cover’d books for pictures sought,
   Or stories childhood loves to tell,
With many an urgent promise bought,
   To get to-morrow’s lesson well.

And many a thing, a minute’s sport,
   Left broken on the sanded floor,
When we would leave our play, and court
   Our parents’ promises for more.
Tho’ manhood bids such raptures die,
   And throws such toys aside as vain,              
Yet memory loves to turn her eye,
   And count past pleasures o’er again.

Around the glowing hearth at night,
   The harmless laugh and winter tale
Go round, while parting friends delight
   To toast each other o’er their ale;
The cotter oft with quiet zeal
   Will musing o’er his Bible lean;
While in the dark the lovers steal
   To kiss and toy behind the screen.  
           
Old customs! Oh! I love the sound,
   However simple they may be:
Whate’er with time hath sanction found,
   Is welcome, and is dear to me.
Pride grows above simplicity,
   And spurns them from her haughty mind,
And soon the poet’s song will be
   The only refuge they can find.

02 December 2023

Poetry for Christmas: "The Christmas Wreath"

A wreath for merry Christmas quickly twine,
A wreath for the bright red sparkling wine,
Though roses are dead
And their bloom is fled,
Yet for Christmas a bonnie, bonnie wreath we'll twine.

Away to the wood where the bright holly grows,
And its red berries blush amid winter snows,
Away to ruin where the green ivy clings,
And around the dark fane its verdure flings;
Hey! for the ivy and holly so bright,
They are the garlands for Christmas night.


Louisa Anne Twamley, 1835

01 December 2023

29 November 2023

Guising and Other Traditions

CHRISTMAS BOOK REVIEW

A Cornish Christmas, Tony Deane and Tony Shaw
This is the final volume of the Sutton Christmas books from the different shires of England that I've been collecting for several years now (not the last book in the series, just the one I bought last). Not sure why this is in a different format: a much smaller volume with teeny-tiny print and photos as compared to the others, but once again a series of short excerpts from Cornwall-set novels, nonfiction articles, and poetry set at the Christmas season, complete with the Cornish dialect ("z's" for "s's," for example).

Much commentary about guising, which would probably terrify the cross-dressing religious whackos showing up on the news: Christmas past was a time of men dressing up as women, women dressing up as men, and lots of costumes. It was, as you'll read, also a lot of drunken revelry. Still, happy childhood memories pop up with children happy to get an orange and an apple in the Christmas stocking, full butcher shops, and the occasional snowstorm, plus people making merry at the workhouse.

The small format of this volume makes it hard to see the historic photos. A pity.


Christmas Past
, Brian Earl
Brian Earl has been doing the "Christmas Past" podcast for six years now; it's an enjoyable excursion into the traditions of the Yuletide season. This book distills some of his most popular episodes into print; it's excellent for a gift book for someone who's curious about where our Christmas customs come from. I have several books like this (Ace Collins, Clement Miles, Tanya Gulevich, etc.), but this has updated information and also includes modern traditions—most prominently about classic television Christmas animation, but the chapter about the snow globes was fascinating, too.

As Earl points out, a lot of the traditions go back so far that it's difficult to track down exactly where they started. However, I am puzzled by his chapter on "The Twelve Days of Christmas." It is indeed a "forfeit" song, sung for party games, not a Christian metaphor, and I remember singing about "colly birds" (rather than "calling birds") from when I learned the song in the 1960s, but at one point it states "On days six through nine, we have pipers piping and drummers drumming." Actually day six is the geese and day seven is the swans, it's days eight through twelve that are interpreted as other things than birds. (Hallmark's answer to the "five golden rings" in their recent "12 Days of Christmas" ornament set was to make the fifth day a ring-necked pheasant.) I'm not sure how that error made it into the book.

Otherwise, if you've never read a book about the history of Christmas, this is a good place to start; Earl has a nice chatty writing style, and the book is supplemented with illustrations and photographs (which I wish were in color rather than retro black and white) and cheery graphics.


02 September 2023

Sugar and Spice and Ancient Ways

CHRISTMAS BOOK REVIEW
The Secret History of Christmas Baking: Recipes & Stories from Tomb Offerings to Gingerbread Boys
, Linda Raedisch
This is, at its heart, a recipe book, and I don't do recipe books...but-!

This is by the same author who did The Old Magic of Christmas, which is a delightful, nonstandard history of Christmas' pagan antecedents—truly, "not your mother's Christmas book." This volume is about the Christmas standards: stollen, gingerbread, fruitcake, and all, full of the spices and nuts we consider essential to the holiday, and the history of the use of these spices along with the recipes for these items (and more) included. For instance, one used to have to get spices from apothecaries, as they were used in ancient medicines. Raedisch's history begins, indeed, in ancient Egypt, with a recipe using "tiger nuts." Did you know that candy corn was originally invented as a Christmas treat? In the United States, where corn syrup replaced marzipan as a sweetening for the lower classes, the result was candy corn! Also covered is Germany's Christkindl, portrayed by a young woman in a crown, the bleak companions of St. Nicholas who meted out punishments, and finally American contributions to gingerbread lore via the Pennsylvania Dutch.

History and vintage recipes all in one volume! I'm here for the history, but I don't mind the other.

Many thanks to Netgalley for the Advance Reading Copy!

13 January 2023

"Calennig" -- a Welsh Holiday Custom

The name "Calennig" comes from the Latin "Kalends," which was the name for a Roman New Year's festival. The Romans gave each other olive branches as a way of wishing others good health for the new year.

In Wales, the offering is traditionally an apple, stuck with cloves, with an evergreen branch (usually boxwood, but sometimes pine or holly) through its stem and three small sticks of wood to form a tripod to support the apple. This "perllan" would be taken door to door; in the "olden times" the children begged for food, but in more modern times the children would receive some coins or candy.

A town called Cwm Gwaun and other villages in the surrounding area still celebrate this old custom on January 13, the first day of the new year on the old Julian Calendar.


Read more about the Welsh new year traditions on Hen Galan (Welsh for "first day of the month").

05 January 2023

75 Years of Miracle on 34th Street

CHRISTMAS BOOK REVIEW
Miracle on 34th Street: The Perfect Christmas Classic (75 Years)
Technically this is a special interest publication put out by the people at "Time" magazine under the old "Life" moniker, but it's a nice tribute to this classic film, and I'm glad to have found it, because I believe there's too much fuss made about It's a Wonderful Life when this is such a satisfying Christmas fable. There are some nifty publicity and behind-the-scenes photos, portraits of the four main actors in the film, a short history of the Macy's parade, a discussion about Macy's rival Gimbel's, but, really, why, oh, why, if this was a tribute to the 1947 film did they have to devote eight pages to the Richard Attenborough remake? Couldn't we have had brief portraits of the careers of the supporting actors, including Porter Hall as Dr. Sawyer, William Frawley as Halloran, Jerome Cowan as DA O'Mara, Gene Lockhart as Judge Harper, and Philip Tonge as Shellhammer, not to mention brief mention of character actress Thelma Ritter (this was her first film!) and the "guy at the post office who saved Santa Claus," future Oscar winner Jack Albertson? I sure would have been more interested in them than photos of the dorky remake.

04 January 2023

Shepherds--and Carolers, Tipteers, Etc.--Arise!

CHRISTMAS BOOK REVIEW
A Sussex Christmas, compiled by Shaun Payne
Alan Sutton Publishing has a series of these "Christmas anthologies," the first which I bought at a book sale several years ago, and I try to pick up inexpensive copies when I can find them. Most of them concentrate on a certain shire or area in England (there are a handful, like A Dickens Christmas, A Wartime Christmas, and A Bronte Christmas that are set around a historic era instead).

This volume is stuffed with Christmasy and wintry goodies, covering the southern shire of Sussex, known for its rolling downs and sheep, so there are several entries that have to do with shepherds and their importance in the Christmas story as well as providing a portrait of Sussex in the old days when the independence of farmers and livestock owners was prized. A good deal of the tales are those of families celebrating in an old-fashioned style, with beef roasts and turkeys that had to be cooked in the bakers' ovens; trees covered with candles, and children happy with gifts like tops, dolls, and nuts; lottery drawings for Christmas dinner prizes; and cutting fresh holly in the woods. Of course there are a couple of ghost stories, an excerpt from the "Mapp and Lucia" stories; and several essays about walking the beautiful Sussex downs in wintertime. The routine story about the Christmas mummers is presented in a different manner, this time concentrating on a man who was trying to revive the custom in Sussex. Offerings from Bob Copper, a popular folk singer, are also included. Poetry also scatters the volume, including Francis Thompson's beautiful verse "To a Snowflake," and, of interest among the illustrations (maps, posters, advertisements, and more) are vintage winter photographs from the late 1930s, some from the George Garland collection.

02 January 2023

Memorably Heartwarming

CHRISTMAS BOOK REVIEW
Memorable Christmas Stories, compiled by Leon R. Hartshorn
This is another Christmas book I just plucked up from a book sale to add to my sizeable Christmas book collection (I don't buy recipe or decorating books, just histories of Christmas and short stories). I didn't look at it more closely until I got home. It's a publication of Deseret Books, and basically is a collection of heartwarming original short stories and "Chicken Soup for the Soul" type entries from several publications of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (commonly known as "Mormons"): "The Deseret News," "Improvement Era," "The Instructor," and "Relief Society Magazine," as well as publications like "Reader's Digest" and "Guideposts."

This certainly gave me a lot more pleasure than this year's "Chicken Soup" book! The fiction pieces, especially, are in the style of stories that might have been published in "St. Nicholas" or in women's magazines of the early 20th century (or in the current magazine "The People's Friend"). At least two of the stories ("The Fiftieth Cake" and "The Christmas Cards") are about older people finding love, which I adored. Others are about small children having faith and their wishes coming true. One, the story of a streetcar conductor and some rich teens, I had read in one of Joe Wheeler story compilations; the grandmother character in the first fiction piece in the collection put me to mind of Gran in Kate Seredy's The Open Gate!

If you like Christmas stories in the vein of Christmas With Anne and Other Stories by L.M. Montgomery, it is well worth your while to pick up even if you aren't a Latter-Day Saint.