I don’t think I have to explain who Charles Dickens is, and I’m quite sure everyone knows his famous “Christmas Carol in Prose” about hard-hearted miser Ebenezer Scrooge who is purified during the night before Christmas.
But this story collection contains more (some of them quite unknown) tales, although I have to mention that, despite the title, only a part of them are really Christmas stories.
Different in tone and atmosphere, all these stories can easily be recognized as being written by Dickens, by his unmistakable narrative style with elements of picaresque novel, Gothic fiction and satire, among others, even though a certain development, a turn to more seriousness, gradually becomes apparent.
The heroes and heroines here are often much too good to be true, that is, strikingly generous, altruistic and noble-minded, whereas the antagonists undergo remarkably speedy changes. Well, I guess that’s the fairy-tale part of the stories …
Anyway, “positive” women and girls in these tales are almost always soft, gentle, kind, indulgent, pretty etc., in short: they have all sorts of “female virtues”, or the typical female connotations of the Victorian era, which eventually started to get on my feminist nerves.
But nevertheless, both books are skillfully (or rather, masterfully!) written, with a decent portion of social criticism.
4.5 stars.