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Christmas Forever [Paperback]

David G. edited by HARTWELL (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)


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Product Details

  • Paperback
  • Publisher: Tor (1993)
  • ASIN: B000OTJ0U8
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

More About the Author

Prize-winning, bestselling novelist Sarah Smith was born in Boston, moved away at 3 weeks old to live in places that have included Wisconsin, New Mexico, and New York; she has also lived in Japan, England, and France. She began telling stories at the age of four, re-telling the Japanese legends she had heard from her family's Japanese maid the night before. Her mother's family has lived in the same house since 1880 and parts of it have never been redecorated. When she was growing up, she and her grandmother would start the day by starting a fire in the stove: which included sawing kindling, bringing upstairs two hods of coal, laying the fire, and hovering over it until it was started.

Not surprisingly, her first three novels are set in the Victorian and Edwardian period: THE VANISHED CHILD, THE KNOWLEDGE OF WATER, and A CITIZEN OF THE COUNTRY. Two were named NEW YORK TIMES Notable Books and one a LONDON TIMES Book of the Year; they also have made numerous other Best of the Year lists and regional and national bestseller lists, and have been published in 12 languages.

Her first novel for young adults, THE OTHER SIDE OF DARK, is about ghosts, interracial romance, and a secret kept since slavery times. It has won both the Agatha for best YA mystery and the Massachusetts Book Award for best YA book.

The Shakespeare authorship controversy forms the center of her modern standalone novel, CHASING SHAKESPEARES, which Samuel R. Delany has called "the best novel about the Bard since NOTHING LIKE THE SUN." Two young graduate students together find a letter by one W. Shakespeare of Stratford saying he didn't write the plays. Posy Gould, from Harvard, wants the letter to start her career; Joe Roper, from Northeastern, wants to save Shakespeare--and Posy is going to give him only a week to do it. CHASING SHAKESPEARES is being made into a play.

While writing CHASING SHAKESPEARES, Sarah herself found a major document in the Shakespeare authorship controversy, a new long poem by Edward de Vere, Earl of Oxford and the other major Shakespeare claimant. Mark Anderson says of it, "Sarah Smith has effectively added a whole new work to the Shakespeare canon." A NEW SHAKESPEAREAN POEM is published separately with Sarah's introduction and notes.

Sarah has also written science fiction and horror, novels meant to be read on the computer, and several nonfiction books. She lives near Boston, where she works in the Mastering (MasteringPhysics, MasteringChemistry) group at Pearson.

 

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Science Fiction and Fantasy for Christmas, February 1, 2011
By 
L. M Young (Marietta, GA USA) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Christmas Forever (Hardcover)
This is the second (I think) in Hartwell's string of Christmas sci-fi/fantasy short story anthologies. As always in anthologies, there are some you like, some you don't--and with fantasy, sometimes a couple you don't understand.

In general, I liked this book. The first story, about a youngster who wants to make a Christmas display on an alien planet, sets the stage for the remainder of the stories well. I particularly enjoyed "My Favorite Christmas," about a teenager spending Christmas with a legendary uncle; "Prince of the Powers of This World," about a child waiting for a Christmas birth; "The Cockatrice Boys," about a fight against monsters who have invaded Earth; the sentimental "Pal O'Mine," "A Present for Santa," set in a future where the Government decides whether you live or die; the humorous "We Three Kings," featuring three Christmas monsters; "Christmas Wingding," even a very odd story where Scrooge becomes the film noir gumshoe in a Maltese Falcon world. Several were...very strange. "A Present for Hanna" was just plain creepy.

The story that most affected me was "And When They Appear." It was a very imaginative story told from the POV of a small boy who lives in a house designed to protect him. But the last two pages were just so terribly creepy I cannot get the story out of my mind, and I wish it would go away.

Recommended if you don't have problems with stories staying with you (otherwise just skip that one).
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