"To Hell With Hallmark" takes the concept of a Hallmark Christmas movie VERY seriously, and destroys it, gleefully, painfully, in several different horrific ways, from the inside! I'm still laughing my head off with the imaginative twists of every story, and the cheerfully awful 'happy endings'...
'Hallmark' is the name of those movies on the Hallmark Channel, a 24-hour cable TV service. For anyone unfamiliar with Hallmark movies, perhaps a joke might help. Here it goes:
- What has three locations, fifteen characters and one plot?
- 689 Hallmark Christmas movies.
They're essentially uncreative, sentimentalist carbage, usually with career women from the big city coming to a small town, discovering romance, and realizing their wrong life choices.
"To Hell With Hallmark" contains ten short Christmas tales, one epilogue, and a nasty little poem in the end. Each story picks up a Hallmark theme and turns it inside out, going for the most disturbing interpretation possible. All stories are set in the fictional town of Hallmark, VT, "the town where it snows every Christmas Eve at exactly the right moment"! The perfect place to celebrate Christmas (the town is obsessed with it); but something is wrong with Hallmark.
For example, in "Dimples for the Holidays," librarian Jenny stumbles on Glenn; has she found romance? She has indeed. But Glenn has found so much more... Same in "Santa's Roadside Assistant": Bryce meets Yvonne, the owner of Moonlight Towing, during the festivities; he thinks romance blooms; but Yvonne has a tale to tell... The stories are interrelated (Yvonne appears in other tales too). What was inspired, however, was to allow one story to develop in the background of the others: "Gingerbread Cookie Throwdown" was utterly hilarious, and haunts the rest of the tales too. Career women can be found in "No Place More Special," with its cruel ending; golddiggers come up in "Christmas with His Parents," a morally horrifying story that was great fun to read; and, to Yvonne's surprise, even princes visit Hallmark ("A Prince in Hallmark"). There's also some LBQT+ representation, in "The Girl Who Hates Christmas," a story so hilariously nasty I'd prefer a Hallmark movie (#not). Rock music stars in "Merry Rock-Mas," with a nod to Alien; and a couple of stories actually celebrate Christmas ("A Christmas Carol" and "Oh, Christmas Tree") in unexpected ways (especially the second, when Hallmark residents burn the town Christmas Tree). Finally, the epilogue ("Friends in a Diner") fulfills the promise of the book's title - Hallmark Goes to Hell.
If you're after a short horror book for 'the holidays', or a plain palate cleanser between heavy-duty horror books, "To Hell With Hallmark" is the perfect choice: a collection that's dark, smart, funny, horrific, mocking, even delightfully offensive. Go for it!