Christmas Short Stories
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Narrated by:
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James Adams
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By:
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Charles Dickens
Charles Dickens is known for writing the greatest of all Christmas stories...
A Christmas Carol, but few know that he wrote a number of other short stories for that holiday season. Here in one wonderful audio collection are six short stories about Christmas--A Christmas Tree, What Christmas is as We Grow Older, The Poor Relation's Story, The Child's Story, The Schoolboy's Story and Nobody's Story.
Public Domain (P)2011 eChristian, Inc.Listeners also enjoyed...
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Adams reads them competently, but didn't really elevate the stories (to my ears).
I doubt I'll be listening to this particular collection again.
Hard to Get Into
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What Christmas Is as We Grow Older: This was a bit sad, contemplating the jadedness of adulthood and how we shift from children believing in magic to distrusting everything. I didn’t find it uplifting.
The Poor Relations Story: The principle character of this story seems to weave in and out of being a rough sketch of Scrooge. Obviously, it isn’t consistent, and there are many differences. Dickens wrote it as its own short story outright, it just had strong “Christmas Carol” vibes.
The Child’s Story: This one also had a bit of “Christmas Carol” vibes! The narrator gets to travel in time to a variety of stages in his life. Each stage informs on the building blocks that make the man who he presently is.
The Schoolboy’s Story: This one had a charming, Christmas happy ending. It had the typical dreary view of British boarding schools, so the happy ending was necessary to redeem the drudgery of the piece.
Nobody’s Story: This was clever! Characters such as the “Bigwig Family” seemed to be abstract images of stereotypes. In true Dickens fashion, he uses the misery of the lower class to convict those who are more fortunate for their lack of compassion.
“Nobody lived and died in the old, old way... Let us think of them this year at the Christmas fire and not forget them when it is burnt out.”
Altogether, I wasn’t blown away by the writing. “Nobody’s Story” was the most interesting, but I found a lot of the imagery difficult to follow. The narrator didn’t help bring any of it to life for me.
It was just OK
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A disastrous recording
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The reader is satisfactory, but it just doesn't make up for the lack of content.
Disappointing!
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