This was a slow start. Although I appreciated the traditional passages as from authors such as Washington Irving and the one by Francis Church-- "Yes, Virginia there is a Santa Clause" (a beautiful piece of writing) it was past the middle of the book before we get to the really good stuff. The literary short stories were much more exciting. I loved the ones by Alice Childress, Richard Yates, Ntozake Shange, Grace Paley, Bobbie Ann Mason and John Cheever. Their images stayed with me for quite some time. Most of all the story "Drawing Names" by Bobbie Ann Mason. Such a modern Christmas story, so many more meanings then I expected it to have. I want to read all of these writers now. Shange's story especially moved me and made me feel happy; Yates' haunted me.
Here is a quote from Paley, (her's was an immigrant's view of American Christmas, something they did not celebrate, but an apt observation: " Christmas. What's the harm? After all, history teaches everyone. We learn from reading this is a holiday from pagan times also, candles, lights, even Chanukah. So we learn it's not altogether Christian. So if they think it's a private holiday, they're only ignorant, not patriotic. What belongs to history, belongs to all men."