The Gift of the Magi by O. Henry

Long Lost Reviews is a monthly meme created by Ally over at Ally’s Appraisals which is posted on the second Thursday of every month. The aim is to start tackling your review backlog. Whether it’s an in-depth analysis of how it affected your life, one sentence stating that you only remember the ending, or that you have no recollection of reading the book at all. 

Published: 3rd October 2006Goodreads badge
Publisher:
Simon Schuster
Pages: 32
Format: Paperback
Genre: Classic
★   ★  ★  ★ – 4 Stars

One dollar and eight-seven cents is all the money Della has in the world to buy her beloved husband a Christmas present. She has nothing to sell except her only treasure — her long, beautiful brown hair. Set in New York at the turn of the twentieth century, this classic piece of American literature tells the story of a young couple and the sacrifices each must make to buy the other a gift.

I had two roundabout introductions to this story: the first was in Christmas Eve on Sesame Street, the second was the Simpsons episode entitled Grift of the Magi. It wasn’t until I actually read the book though did I realise that is was Sesame Street was referencing with their adorable Bert and Ernie side story, and while I knew the name, I never knew what it was about.

This is an incredibly quick read, it is a short story but one that has a lot of impact. Henry draws you into the era with the language and the descriptions. You also see the love and devotion that Della and her husband have for one another and it is a testament to the writing that such a short story had impacted on the cultural psyche.

There’s the beautiful Christmas spirit and the love of a young married couple to entice you as you read. It’s an incredibly sweet story and in a way Della gets a raw deal, but that is taking away a bit of the magic. It is simple but heartfelt and there is a wonderful Christmas feel to the book.

The Naughty List by Holly Lansley

Published: 1st October 2019Goodreads badge
Publisher:
Make Believe Ideas
Illustrator: Lara Ede
Pages: 32
Format: Picture Bookpict
★   ★   ★   ★   ★  – 5 Stars

A brand-new picture book told in the form of a letter to Santa. The letter is written by a boy named Tom, who is trying to convince Santato put him on the Nice List, even though his behaviour has been bad all year! Hear all about the things Tom has done and the ways he tries to spin them to Santa.

This is a fabulous book written in the style of a letter to Santa which is hilarious, clever, and even at times very sweet.

There is so much to love about this book. From page one I was in love and seeing the colourful and decorative formatting makes it even more enjoyable and brilliant. The formatting is big and bold, filled with colour and decoration with emphasis placed by the letter writer which in turns helps when reading and shows how passionate Tom is in his belief and his reasonable explanations.

The rhyme is fantastic, it’s a great poem about all of Tom’s well intentions but essentially naughty adventures through the year which may have got him on the Naughty List. I loved how Tom explains his actions and how insistent he is that he wasn’t actually being naughty at the time he was having an adventure or quite often just trying to help.

The illustrations are woven into the story with the text appearing on lined paper reminiscent of a child’s Christmas list and reflects the story of this complaint letter to Santa. There are drawings on the letter which are from Tom’s hand but there are also drawings on the adjacent page in a more defined style depicting the action he’s defending himself against. I liked Ede’s style of bright and cartoonish drawings. Tom’s cheeky nature comes through as well as those suffering around him.

This is a brilliant book not just for the story and the rhyme but the creativity of the formatting and the presentation was a huge bonus. This is a funny and clever book that is a wonderful spin on why one may find themselves on the naughty list this year.

You can purchase The Naughty List via the following

Booktopia | Book Depository

Angus and Robinson

 Fishpond | Amazon | Amazon Aust

Merry Christmas!

Toby Xmas2Good morning, all! Christmas has arrived at my house, Santa has come and gone, and there are treats and surprises under my tree ready to be discovered.

I hope you’ve all had a wonderful year, and that any problems and hurdles that have come your way have been met with as many or more delightful experiences and occasions. After a hectic last few months, personally I’m looking forward to a distraction and a breather today before getting things finalised before the new year.

Of course, the best thing to wish for today is that your 25th December is filled with bookish moments, even if that means sneaking away after the prawns and ham at lunchtime to read a sneaky chapter or two before presents are opened!

I would like to say a quick thank you to all my readers and followers this year, especially all the beautiful and talented authors who have given me their books to read. It is incredibly and continually astounding how much faith and trust you put in me to do them justice.

So whether Christmas has yet to reach your home, or whether you are celebrating other festivities this holiday season I hope you have a truly wonderful time and spend it in good company.

Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays from Lost in a Good Book!

 

Merry Christmas (and Happy Boxing Day)!

Toby Xmas2Merry Christmas everyone! A tad belated I know but it still counts. As much as I wanted to put a Christmas post up yesterday I soon realised it just was not going to happen despite my best intentions. So instead I’ll bring you the Boxing Day post instead! Today in Australia it is Boxing Day, a day of yachts and cricket. It is also the start of “the week of leftovers” and a time to regroup and recover after the chaos of Christmas (unless you are like me with a four day Christmas of events with various people nonstop in which case I’ll see you on the other side on the 29th). I do hope you all had a wonderful holiday whether it was Christmas or any other holiday this season.

My Christmas was very hectic at times but it was nice to have everyone over to celebrate, especially seeing people’s face light up when they see the presents you gave them. After a day of food and presents long into the night my feet and I were very pleased to get ourselves into bed.

Without the full recap and reliving of my Christmas I will share with you the wonderful bookish presents I received instead. I am a trivia nut and I love a good fun fact which means I also love telling people a good fun fact on any possible topic if the subject comes up. As a result I was given two awesome fact books from the genius elves of QI, the British quiz show with impossible rules and stomach aching laughter while you learn fascinating things you didn’t know were wrong or you just never knew you never knew.

The two books are 1339 QI Facts to Make Your Jaw Drop and the other is 1411 QI Facts to Knock You Sideways. Years ago I had received other books in the QI series like The Book of General Ignorance, The Second Book of General Ignorance: Everything You Think You Know Is (Still) Wrong , and even an animal edition of The Book of Animal Ignorance: Everything You Think You Know Is Wrong. I implore anyone who loves knowing things and learning everything they have been taught is wrong to read these books and watch QI, you won’t regret it.

But I digress. I also gave as many books as I received this Christmas. I gave two Spot books to the kids of friends of ours, and a book on WW2 for my mother, and I saw many other people get books during the day as well which is always a pleasure to see.

So after the festivities of yesterday, Boxing Day is a bit calmer. I have no doubt the Sydney to Hobart yacht race will be filling the TV, possibly with the occasional flick over to the cricket to see what is going on. I foresee more food, less presents, but a nice day catching up with family and friends once more.

I hope all your Christmases were filled with wonderful things and you were given great bookish things as well be they books or book related things. I also wish anyone going to the Boxing Day sales the very best of luck, I’m sure you have a solid system in place on how you will tackle the shops today.

Enjoy the rest of your silly season activities, and if Christmas was the first and last of them then enjoy some time off before the joy of New Years Eve. Have a wonderful time whatever it is you are doing and read something spectacular.

Christmas!!…and reading Christmas!

So Christmas has officially started! Free from Uni, free from NaNo! (totally won it by the way…just!). This morning my tree went up, the house is decorated from top to tail with Christmas goodies. And the tinsel! Oh my love of tinsel shall never wane; you just open the box filled with it and the smell hits you in the face and it is beautiful. Walking down the aisles in the shops that are lined with tinsel is heaven upon gloriousness. Love it.

But it also means it is the start of my Christmas reading. The same books get revisited every year because I adore them I have my Christmas movies and my Christmas books that get revisited every December and we can finally begin. The first is my absolute favourite, A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens. What I love about this book is that it is not just a beautiful message about Christmas and life and all those wonderful things, it is timeless, while not being timeless at the same time. It is clearly set in an era, you cannot escape that, but if there is something that the countless, countless parodies and variations of this book have demonstrated, is that the message and story is ongoing, universal, and something we always need to remember.  This reading of course is coupled with dozens of viewings of A Muppet Christmas Carol which is as good as the book in all possible ways.

The next annual reading is The Hogfather by Terry Pratchett. I first read this uni, which is actually many years ago now which is a bit depressing, but I adored it from page one. Pratchett’s humour and his absurdity works brilliantly, and while it is part of the Discworld series (of which I knew nothing about at the time) it actually all makes sense without you needing to know anything else about it. Though I suppose if you did you would get a few more references of have a better background, but truly, not important to have read the past ones. It is actually, proper, laugh out loud funny. Every page and every paragraph has something funny on it, and there is a beautiful message in it about the power of believing and what is means for the world. It’s spectacular.

Of course we need a read of A Night Before Christmas, how can you not, along with How The Grinch Stole Christmas. Short and sweet but delightful poems about Christmas. I am trying to expand on this list a bit as well, so there is definitely some hunting going on about what new Christmas books I can read.  One I actually read before the Christmas reading , and will now be adding to my annual list, was Let it Snow by John Green, Maureen Johnson, and Lauren Myracle. Let It Snow is the only one to be added in the last five years since The Hogfather which is bad. I keep forgetting to track down new ones. The movies keep building, books, not so much. It is absolutely brilliant! Three stories by three authors, and all three stories are so well told and each author is exquisite in the narration by the characters and the stories they have to tell. I am not giving anything away about that except saying it is a wonderful Christmas read, but it also works outside the Christmas season because it just does and it is wonderful.

I have decided I need to start investing in books that cover Australian Christmases, like not just that have Christmas in them, but focused around Christmas. I have realised that a lot of the Aussie Christmas songs or books seem to be parodies or novelty. I want people to stop thinking Santa in shorts and thongs is comical and have a serious book about Christmas that may happen to include a Christmas with a beach, or a sweltering summer and advent calendars that melt, or just ones that show how beautiful Christmas can be here without the place being covered in snow.

The songs are getting better I have found. Christmas in Australia by Christine Anu is a serious favourite, it just captures everything beautiful about Christmas here. I’m not saying Aussie Jingles Bells isn’t wonderful as well, but they don’t exactly play that at Carols in the Domain now do they. Perhaps the answer is to write my own Christmas story. That’s the new plan. I tried it in my first year of doing NaNoWriMo five years ago, but it ended up being a kind of set up that was like a diary entry/account of this lady’s life leading up to Christmas. It was not bad per se…for a first time NaNo thing, but it was just a bunch of chapters describing a woman’s day and thoughts leading up to Christmas and all the stuff she did. I recall writing four thousand words just on vacuuming the house before putting up the decorations. So there was that. But there were also other moments with the family watching carols, or going Christmas light looking, sitting listening to the cicadas on warm nights. I think this new task shall be a bit more story like. Something like A Christmas Carol without being like A Christmas Carol at all what so ever.

So that is the current plan. Christmas books, Christmas movies, Christmas for all the days. The carols too, we can’t forget we can squeeze them in between the reading and watching and other fun times. I also have so, so much catching up on everything to do while Uni and NaNo stole my time. Crossing all the things we can finally get some time to actually post some reviews. I miss my reviews! And then I suppose we are also going to see if we can plan out a Christmas story? Why not try when it is the Christmas season. You have a lot to draw from and the references are all around you. But who can think of that now. My feet ache, everything aches from decorating, but the house looks wonderful, the tree looks wonderful, and it is only December 1st and I am totally ready to go for Christmas. As always I am all in and ready to go!

Christmas room

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