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Christmas: Tradition, Truth and Total Baubles

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Why is Christmas the way it is? How did we get from the birth of Jesus to everyone maxing out their credit card – and their belts?
Starting with the nativity itself, this book takes us through the centuries of commemoration, celebration and over-consumption. Along the way we’ll find out why we eat turkey, how an obscure Turkish saint turned into a man flying a sleigh, and why that tree in your house should rally contain an apple and a snake.
 
Combining in-depth historical research with cheerfully irreverent humor and a dash of cutting-edge guesswork, Nick Page shows us how many of the things we believe about Christmas are actually a load of old baubles – and helps us get back to something real and true beneath all the wrapping.

256 pages, Hardcover

Published October 4, 2022

31 people are currently reading
2450 people want to read

About the author

Nick Page

200 books47 followers
Nick Page lives in Oxfordshire, UK, with his wife Claire, their three daughters and a dog called Bill.

As well as writing books, he works with a number of campaign groups and NGOs. He is also a popular speaker for churches, church weekends and other events. events, etc.

His main focus is on church history – particularly the early church. Recent work includes A Nearly Infallible History of Christianity, and the Longest Week trilogy.

As well as writing many books for adults (or at least those who think they are adult) he has also written many books for children.

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5 stars
35 (33%)
4 stars
45 (43%)
3 stars
20 (19%)
2 stars
3 (2%)
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0 (0%)
Displaying 1 - 18 of 18 reviews
Profile Image for M.  Slinger-Carreer.
154 reviews6 followers
December 12, 2022
I found the information interesting, however, what I did not find interesting was the way the author presented this information. As a non-fiction book, I wasn't anticipating it to be very exciting. I'm fine if the author takes a few liberties to make it more intriguing or fun with a unique writing style or adding humor; and Nick Page opted to do this. However, I am not a fan of dry humor so it ended up being a tough read. I wanted to know the information but it was hard to focus because I was rolling my eyes so much. Also, the overall format of the book seem clunky to me. You jump from a made-up chapter of "The Christmas Carol" featuring the Spirit of Christmas-that-never-was, to just general info, to a chapter about a Christmas carol and then some other letter-to-the-editor format. I appreciate the author attempting to give this info in a unique way, but it was poorly executed in my opinion.
3 stars, didn't love it, didn't hate it.
Profile Image for Gerald Wilson.
205 reviews5 followers
February 27, 2022
The topic of Nick Page’s latest offering is (as the title tells us) Christmas. He looks at the origins of tradition, when some things became traditional and debunks much of the myths and folklore surrounding the season. Have you a favourite tradition? Be prepared to learn it’s not as old as you might think. Every one who has read the bible knows that Jesus wasn’t born on 25 December but Nick explains why the church chose the date to celebrate his birth and approximately when. Who was St Nicholas? Who is Santa Claus? Are they the same person? All this and more in Nick’s amusing and humorous take on an ancient traditional celebration. Read this and Yule never think of Christmas in the same way again. ( see what I did there?)
Profile Image for D.J. Lang.
851 reviews21 followers
December 26, 2021
If the following criteria are met, I give a book five stars: I recommend the book; I own the book; I'm giving others the gift of this book; I learn something; I find something(s) meaningful. Oh! And, I enjoy the book, too. I already knew there was a good chance that I would like the writing of Page since I have read a few of his other books. I knew that he would research thoroughly and include a bibliography and end notes (which I sometimes read), and that he would include hilarious comments in footnotes (which I always read). Who might not like the book: a reader who does not want his/her/their thoughts about Christmas (whether pagan, Christian, or something else) disturbed by any kind of research and/or a reader without a sense of humor.

Additional note: The book is mostly for those readers living in the northern hemisphere as the southern hemisphere will laugh at these festivities dispelling the gloom of the cold weather. Santa riding in on a surfboard while the family barbecues on the beach did not make it to these pages. Even brussel sprouts made it to one page (the author writes a pithy, hearty 'no' to eating them, but we'll forgive Nick -- no relation to the guy in a red suit as far as I know -- no author can be 100% correct).

I finished reading it on Christmas Eve 2021. All copies were sold out in 2020 when I originally went to get it. I'll get my order in early for the 2022 year.
Profile Image for Edoardo Albert.
Author 54 books157 followers
January 23, 2023
You know all those stories and memes about Christmas actually being a pagan feast that the early Church appropriated? Christmas trees, yule and yule logs, even the actual day of the celebration? Turns out that the myth of the Christian origin of Christmas is as much a myth as its detractors claim the feast is itself.

Nick Page does an excellent job of chasing the historical roots of Christmas down to their often obscure origins. In particular, he digs down into the origin of the feast in the Christian calendar and the roughly contemporary start of the pagan feast that the Church was supposed to have muscled in upon.

Coming closer in time, it’s fascinating to learn how many apparently ancient Christmas customs are actually relatively recent, with most of them starting in the 18th and, particularly, 19th centuries. The book’s subtitle – Tradition, Truth and Total Baubles – shows Page’s love of jokes and puns. For this reader, there were slightly too many but that’s down to taste. All in all, the book is an excellent and readable account of how we have come to have the Christmas that we celebrate today.
146 reviews1 follower
December 22, 2023
This came to me through the Redemptorist monthly book club. Now anyone who knows me, will know how much I generally hate Christmas and what a mistletoe misery I am. This is one way I would have liked the seventeenth century Puritans. I am a fan of Scroogeonomics and my other book this year was Mrs Scrooge by Carol Ann Duffy. So you get the picture. But this book actually made me like the whole season, at a distance as I do things now. Which given reports of the shops, is probably a good thing. It is a fun and entertaining book, picking out hymns and their words, everything from saints to Christmas Trees and all the old myths of rather dodgy historical origins, as it turns out. Called Total Baubles. And implausibilities like sheep grazing in winter. And it all comes to seem entertaining and magical, way beyond a religious festival which is why it is the global phenomenon that it is. The funny thing being, this year everyone is saying merry or happy CHRISTMAS, not winter holiday. So same to you.
71 reviews
January 15, 2021
If you are interested in the foundation of Christian tradition, as I am, but are also cynical of the accepted origin of these traditions, again as I am, then this book is definitely for you.

From the off the author is clear that he is writing from a Christian perspective but this does not dominate nor colour the findings he presents. Using literary criticism he reveals the background to many of the accepted ancient traditions, secular and Christian, and places them firmly in their place in time. He does this with a humorous touch and the writing flows well.

Highly recommended
Profile Image for Dean.
606 reviews10 followers
December 14, 2021
I’ve read a few of these type of books, looking at the things that make up what has become our modern Christmas. Most are usually interesting, but you often find your interest wanting by the end as facts and figures are thrown at you.
This author here takes a different tack, using humour and and irreverence while taking the subject matter very seriously.
A lot is information you probably already knew, though you will find some surprises along the way, and the light style of the author always keeps things interesting.
Definitely one on of the better books on Christmas you’ll read. Recommended.
Profile Image for Sheila.
3,351 reviews57 followers
January 5, 2023
Nick Page takes the traditions of Christmas and shows us when they began, why they began, where they began, and what is myth.

I had so much fun reading this. I laughed out loud throughout the book. He is snarky. He is tongue-in-cheek. And he has it documented in the back of the book! I loved the way he parodied A CHRISTMAS CAROL and its ghosts as he takes Scrooge and the Ghost-of-Christmas-that-never-was through the myths and truths of Christmas. The carols he talks of are a hoot as is everything we think of tradition is from the Nativity to Christmas trees to mistletoe, etc.

This is one book everyone should have on their shelves to read as it is a blast for required Christmas reading!
Profile Image for Matt.
198 reviews
December 18, 2025
Equal parts informative and entertaining. Nick Page writes with characteristic humour as he delves into the not so ancient past of many of the traditions and common trivia facts we've been told a thousand times.

Turns out history is more mixed and interesting than the myths we often tell about it.
78 reviews3 followers
January 13, 2024
Puts to bed many of the more persistent myths about the alleged pagan origins of Christmas and also explains the history of more modern Christmas traditions. Author identifies as Christian but I suspect we wouldn't agree on much theologically.
Profile Image for Richard.
306 reviews5 followers
December 24, 2020
I never knew Christmas to be so confusing, but then it has changed A LOT over the years! Witty, informative, and at times comforting. A complete guide to why we do what we do around the 25th December
Profile Image for Sally George.
147 reviews5 followers
December 26, 2020
It is amazing how we embrace tradition which basically comes from 'chinese whispers' by being altered and added to over the centuries. An interesting and very amusing book.
22 reviews
November 21, 2021
Witty Expose

I love Christmas and like reading a book per year on its traditions. Nick writes very well and funnily, I was chortling away.
Profile Image for James.
351 reviews1 follower
December 31, 2021
A fascinating book which shows that a lot of the supposed Pagan roots of Christmas traditions are not actually pagan. Another Nick Page book which enlightens and amuses the reader.
75 reviews
January 4, 2022
Interesting and funny - made me laugh out loud. Nick Page’s sense of humour is so irreverent which suits me just fine. A book for anybody, Christian or not.
15 reviews
December 11, 2022
Absolutely loved this book! So interesting and very funny! If you like Christmas and are curious about it’s origins, definitely read this!
Displaying 1 - 18 of 18 reviews

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