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Parent Category: Research
Category: The World Needs More Christmas Stories

Screenshot 20231225 0213242You've gotten through the special day. You seen your family and passed out all your gifts. All the food is put away. So what comes next?

πŸŽ„Read a Christmas story! Curl up next to a fire (or if you don't have one, pull up a fire with colorful 🌈 flames on YouTube). Grab a cup of coffee or even better, of cocoa, and disappear into the pages.

As a 1st grader, I fell in love with Christmas stories through Ideals, November 1972 Vol. 29, No. 6 (shown above). A gift, it was the only issue of Ideals we ever had. My sister Shari and I read it, cover-to-cover, every year. Besides stories, it contained devotionals, poetry and even recipes. But of course, we were obsessed with the stories.

Screenshot 20231225 0135442A small hardback copy of A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens was my 1st Christmas book. I'm not even sure when or where I got it, but even back to my college years, it was stored in a small box with all the Christmas ornaments I had made and those friends had given to me.

Through the years, I picked up more Christmas books. I'm not obsessed with owning every one I find; the books have to have a certain feel, story-wise, which I probably can't even explain.

I don't know if I'll ever write a book-length Christmas story like these, but until then, I'll continue to pen short and long essays.

Because the world needs more Christmas stories.

________

Photo of Archie Will. Used without permission. But I doubt he's going to complain about it. πŸˆβ€β¬› The bookshelf was made by my grandfather, Kenneth V. Batkins, who passed away when he was only a year older than I am.