3.5 rounded up. A dual time-frame story, alternating between present day Boston where the children's choir at St. Margaret's Church is preparing for their Christmas Eve concert, and the 1860s telling the story of how how Henry Wadsworth Longfellow came to write his famous poem "Christmas Bells." The children's choir will be singing an arrangement of this poem. The contemporary story was told through multiple voices centering around the evening of the choir's last rehearsal, the choir director who has just been told she'll be losing her teaching job due to budget cuts, the accompanist who is silently in love with her, the priest of St. Margaret's who has fallen out with his brother, an elderly nun, two of the children in the choir, their mother whose husband is missing in Afghanistan and doesn't know how to tell the children, and the widow of a Senator listening to their rehearsal, whose husband grew up at St. Margaret's and whose piano is now donated to the church. It's rather charming, but also a bit tedious at times to revisit the same scene and dialog over and over from each point of view. Longfellow's story was a little darker and a little more straight-forward, if a little too heavy on the info dumps about the Civil War. We get it. The author did her research. Still, I rounded up for the heartwarming, happy-ever-after-if a little too neatly resolved ending. But miracles do happen, especially at Christmas-time. And I learned something about Longfellow.
Book description: In present-day Boston, a dedicated teacher is stunned by somber holiday tidings. Sophia’s music program has been sacrificed to budget cuts, and she worries not only about her impending unemployment but also about the consequences to her underprivileged students. At the church where she volunteers as music director, Sophia tries to forget her cares as she leads the children’s choir in rehearsal for a Christmas Eve concert. Inspired to honor a local artist, Sophia has chosen a carol set to a poem by Longfellow, moved by the glorious words he penned one Christmas Day long ago, even as he suffered great loss. Christmas Bells also chronicles the events of 1863, when the peace and contentment of Longfellow’s family circle was suddenly, tragically broken, cutting even deeper than the privations of wartime. Through the pain of profound loss and hardship, Longfellow’s patriotism never failed, nor did the power of his language. “Christmas Bells,” the poem he wrote that holiday, lives on, spoken as verse and sung as a hymn.