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The Gospel According to Matthew and the Gospel According to Luke
…"And she brought forth her firstborn son, and wrapped him in
swaddling clothes, and laid him in a manger; because there was no room for
them in the inn." The original Christmas Classics.
A Christmas Carol, by Charles Dickens
"Every idiot who goes about with 'Merry Christmas' on his lips
should be boiled with his own pudding and buried with a stake of holly
through his heart." First published in 1843, this supernatural story
of an elderly man's redemption from his mean-spirited, miserly ways has
engaged, enlightened, and delighted generations.
Miracle in the Wilderness, by Paul Gallico
In spite of the contention between the French, the Indians, and the
British over which will control America, Jasper Adams has managed to keep
his wilderness home and his genteel, European-born wife, Dorcas safe and
sound until the morning of December 24, when an Indian raiding party
surprises Dorcas while Jasper is from home.
Sister of the Angels, by Elizabeth Goudge
The reader first meets Henrietta and her family and the town of
Torminster in The City of Bells. In this story Eleven-year-old
Henrietta is delighted that her writer father Gabriel Ferranti is coming
home for a long visit at Christmas. For Fans of Goudge here is a wonderful
Christmas tale.
Old Christmas, by Washington Irving
Twenty-four years before Dickens wrote a Christmas Carol, Irving
wrote these sketches of the English Victorian Christmas as observed by an
American. The reader is treated to glimpses of hospitality on Christmas
Eve at Bracebridge Hall, Christmas Day in the village, and dinner in the
great hall complete with a Yule Log and mummers. |
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Christmas Every Day, by William Dean Howells
Wherever Christmas is celebrated and presents given, children have wished it would come every day. Here is a story written in
1892 telling what would happen if it did. It is a story guaranteed to
horrify parents and make children think.
No Holly for Miss Quinn, by Miss Read
Miss Quinn is the highly efficient secretary to a businessman. She is
terrifyingly competent and completely unsentimental about Christmas and
intends to spend the Day in the blissful peace and quiet of her bachelor
quarters. Then her brother phones to say that his wife has been rushed to
hospital and can she come cope with the children. Secretly cursing, Miss
Quinn sets out to do her duty.
The Fox at the Manger, by P.L. Travers
Before Barbara Robinson wrote The Best Christmas Pageant Ever
Travers of Mary Poppins fame wrote this tale of three young boys in
postwar London at Christmas time who are told the story of the fox who
came to the manger to see the Christ Child, and defended to the other
animals his right to be there and his gift for the child.
The Story of the Other Wise Man, by Henry Van Dyke
First published in 1895 this is the story of Artaban, the fourth Wise
Man who, delayed and side-tracked by his compassion for humanity, fails to
arrive in time to see the Christ Child at Bethlehem. Or is he
side-tracked? See if you can read this one without a tear. |