Comes the season of Christmas
stories, and now that Thanksgiving is past and my tree is up, I feel that I can
brightly bring them forth with comfort and joy.
Lucy’s Christmas, written by Donald Hall and illustrated by Michael
McCurdy (David R. Godine, 978-1-56792-342-1) is the story of Donald Hall’s
mother, Lucy, a stove, and a rural Christmas in 1909. Beautifully illustrated
by scratching away the black to reveal bright colors beneath, this book is a
gem, particularly for families whose traditions include church.
Another story based on a
family story is Eli Remembers by Ruth
Vander Zee and Marian Sneider, illustrated by Bill Farnsworth (Eerdmans Books,
978-0-8028-5309-7). A more apt title might have been, Eli Finds Out, for the boy discovers why his grandparents are so
sad on Rosh Hashanah. A journey to Lithuania and the Ponar Forest provide the
answer. Unsentimental and yet full of feeling, from the texture of the
illustrations to the layout of the text, this is a good book for introducing history
within the family.
The Sheltering Cedar by Anne Marshall Runyon (Portal Press,
978-1-933454-02-3) mostly takes place on Ocracoke Island, one of the Barrier Islands off the North Carolina coast. On the island, an old cedar tree, bent from
the fierce nor’easters, shelters the creatures of the beach, just like a harbor
shelters boats and a house shelters people. Cardinals, plovers, beetles, and
toads decorate the pages of this book’s Christmas pages.
Kate DiCamillo, Newberry
Medal winner, joins with illustrator Bagram Ibatoulline to create the story of
Frances, a little girl in Cincinnati whose father is away, fighting in World War II. DiCamillo doesn’t actually
tell the reader this, but through the carefully crafted illustrations in Great
Joy (Candlewick, 978-0-7636-2920-5), Frances’s concern for an organ grinder strike a chord.
This is a wonderful story about the spirit of Christmas, so often lacking in
our contemporary commercial holiday.
Finally, I can’t resist
this The
Night Before Christmas by Clement C. Moore (Candlewick,
978-0-7636-3469-8). The inky illustrations, reminiscent of 19th century cut-outs,
are both crisp and frothy. Every single ornament on the Christmas tree sparkles
and intrigues! At least as delightful is the biography of the illustrator, Niroot
Puttapipat, who is the son of a Thai princess. This new version of an old
favorite perfectly combines nostalgia and high-tech, with its two-dimensional
graphics and its three-dimensional pop-ups.