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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Solid theology meets fun fantasy - a wonderful book!,
This review is from: The Christmas Troll: Sometimes God's Best Gifts Are the Most Unexpected (Hardcover)
These days, Christian books for kids can be sugary sweet and not terribly challenging, especially when it comes to Christmas. Petersen has written an adventurous tale of a Christmas Troll who is at first frightening and bewildering to the little boy and his kid sister. But his gentle (and strange!) presence teaches them an important lesson - not just about Christmas but about a life lived in the presence of the Holy Spirit. God can seem strange! Bewildering! Even ugly!? (Just like the Christmas Troll). God doesn't fit neatly into a box, especially a gift-wrapped one. My son is four years old, and asked for this book for a month running. But in general it may be for a slightly older audience. A good, non-traditional addition to your child's library.
4 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
FABULOUS ILLUSTRATIONS!!,
By Beth Terry "Living plastic-free since 2007. J... (Oakland, CA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Christmas Troll: Sometimes God's Best Gifts Are the Most Unexpected (Hardcover)
I can't believe Amazon has not listed the illustrator, Will Terry. The illustrations are what make this book worth buying. Beautiful, rich, and expressive. I would by anything Will Terry has illustrated.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Thought provoking,
By itsjustme (USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Christmas Troll: Sometimes God's Best Gifts Are the Most Unexpected (Hardcover)
Every once in a while a picture book comes along that makes you and your child think. The Christmas Troll by Eugene H. Peterson is that kind of book. Peterson is best known as the author of the popular Bible paraphrase, The Message, and in his first children's book, he shows both humor and insight.
Andrew is really angry. He asked to open a gift - just a single gift - on Christmas Eve and his mother refused him. Even when he told her his friend Jonathan was opening the last of his presents by now, she refused him. "Gifts are for giving and receiving," his father says, "not for grabbing and getting. Waiting until morning will be good for you." So Andrew decides to run away and take his little sister with them. They enter the woods near their house, a small lantern lighting their way. Although they've taken many family tromps through these woods, they look different - and kind of scary - in the dark. Andrew remembers what Jonathan told him about the trolls who live there; is his friend right? When the the siblings stop and sit on a soft, mossy log, suddenly a growly voice says "Who's sitting on my belly?" Jonathan leaps off the "log" and into the ferns, too terrified to run, but his little sister soon calls out, "It's okay. The troll is ugly - but nice." More than nice, actually. Wonderful. And ridiculous, with spiky, carrot-colored hair. The children are soon bouncing on his belly, while they all laugh. Suddenly Andrew realizes the troll is a gift. "Andrew hadn't expected a gift, he hadn't deserved it, yet he'd gotten it all the same - and it felt great!..And now he wanted to go home as fast as he could, and he wanted to show the troll to Jonathon. He wanted to show everybody a gift, a real gift, a gift you can't wrap with paper and ribbons and put under a tree. He wanted to show Jonathan that he was all wrong about trolls, and all wrong about gifts." When the children try to get the troll to come home with them, he won't budge. Andrew says: "Oh, please, Mr. Troll, please...My father says Christmas is our time to remember that God gives us gifts. That's what he does, give gifts - gifts everywhere, gifts here, gifts there, gifts from above, gifts from below, gifts seen, gifts unseen, and lots and lots and lots of gifts that don't look like gifts but tun out to be the best gift of all. But Jonathan thinks that if it's not wrapped up in a package and tied with a ribbon, it's not a gift. Jonathan needs to know about troll gifts." The troll doesn't follow the children, but when they go home, their father says the best gifts can't be wrapped and put under the tree, "so it's wise to live life expectantly, alert to the surprises of God." That night, Andrew's sister ponders the afternoon. "Drew," she whispers in bed, "do you think Jesus was ugly but nice?" But Andrew is fast asleep, dreaming about Jesus in a manager, very surprised - but pleased - to find him with a head of spiky, carrot-colored hair. What I Like: This story makes both my preschooler and me laugh. The troll is wonderful and ridiculous - and there are so many layers to this story, we've had many long conversations about it. Do some people put God in a box? Is God a lot more unexpected and wonderful than we think? Are God's greatest gifts the surprising ones? Can God, like the troll, seem weird? Ugly and beautiful? Wonderful and terrible? The illustrations by Will Terry are imaginative and captivating. His images of a forest that could be something more draw the reader in, and his troll is both delightful, funny, and awful. My four year old asks for this book again and again. Aside from the biblical story of Jesus' birth, The Christmas Troll is our new favorite Christmas story. What I Dislike: Nothing. Overall Rating: Excellent. Kristina Seleshanko Christian Children's Book Review
0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
christmas story,
By Lalitha "Lalitha" (Niceville, FL) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Christmas Troll: Sometimes God's Best Gifts Are the Most Unexpected (Hardcover)
A little too long of a story for the message that is taught. It seemed like a cuter idea based on the editorial review but in the end is just another take on be thankful for what you have. I'm not saying that's not an important message to learn....this was just a boring way to teach it.
0 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Will Terry rides again!,
By Ray Joseph (Alaska) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Christmas Troll: Sometimes God's Best Gifts Are the Most Unexpected (Hardcover)
I have to agree with Elizabeth Geneva. Will Terry's illustrations are expressive, magnificent and relavant to the the text. My children want any book he illustrates and ignore the text. The illustrations are more than sufficient to provoke a child's imagination and stimulate a deeper appreciation of self, all the while letting a child's mind roam into the wonderment of it all.
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The Christmas Troll: Sometimes God's Best Gifts Are the Most Unexpected by Eugene H. Peterson (Hardcover - September 30, 2004)
$11.99 $10.25
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