Purpose of this Blog...

You may have noticed that not all books are equal in capturing children's imaginations and in cultivating those innocent, tender souls. My goal is to help you find the ones that do!
(Painting by Mary Cassatt: "Mrs Cassatt Reading to her Grandchildren" -1888)




Showing posts with label Santa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Santa. Show all posts

Saturday, December 14, 2013

An Adorable Norwegian Christmas Book

My ancestral roots and my love for St. Lucia Day get me thinking about Scandinavian Christmas books every December...So I was thrilled when I received my Chinaberry Christmas catalog in November and saw a new children's Christmas book about a little girl from Norway on their cover!!!
I knew I had to see the inside of this book, so I immediately sent off an email to the publisher and could barely wait until I received my review copy - which I am excited to be offering to you as a GIVEAWAY today! 12/17/13 Update: Giveaway over.  I'll let the photo illustrations speak for themselves:



A FAMILY PROJECT:
The Christmas Wish is a gift from husband and wife team, Lori Evert and Per Breiehagen to us and their daughter, Anja, the main character who's adorably dressed up in traditional Norwegian garb!
Anja sets out on an adventure to find Santa Claus so she can make her dream come true: to be like one of Santa's Elves and help him deliver toys to children.  Lots of woodland animals (my favorite is the polar bear) help her in her wintry endeavor - but will she succeed?  You'll have to read the book!

From the book jacket:
"Author Lori Evert is a prop, set and wardrobe stylist who loves books, nature and being Anja's mother. She was so inspired by the beauty and magic of an image of Anja with a reindeer that she began spinning a narrative about who they might be and why they were together.  Thus began the four-year family project that is The Christmas Wish.

Award-winning photographer Per Breiehagen grew up in the small mountain town of Al, Norway.  He spent his childhood exploring the dramatic landscapes near his home...Assignments for clients like National Geographic, The New York Times Magazine, and Audubon have brought Per to some of the most remote snow-and-ice-covered regions in the world...Anja's love of the outdoors and winter is a great inspiration for Per."

GIVEAWAY DETAILS:
Leave a comment here and/or on my Facebook link about this post to enter my Giveaway.  Winner announced on Tuesday, December 17, 2013. (You'll get the book in time to put it under your Christmas tree!) Updated 12/17/13 - Giveaway over.

You can order The Christmas Wish yourself here from Amazon. (Chinaberry has sold out of their copies.)







Thursday, December 6, 2012

SAINT NICHOLAS OR SANTA?

We remember this saint, such a holy, good man.
Be like him in charity, do all that you can.
Many miracles Nicholas hastened to do,
Helping people in need with gifts that were new.




Call him "Santa" or "saint," they both mean the same,
For his nickname is Claus, short for Nicholas' name.
Giving gifts was his custom—we still do today.
Deeds done in Jesus' name forever will stay.


-Author Anonymous [source: St. Nicholas Center; photos mine]

Saturday, December 3, 2011

WHO IS THE MAN IN THE RED SUIT?

source
The Christmas traditions we enjoy today in the U.S. are a result of the blending together of the many cultures that are represented in this "great big melting pot".  This is perhaps most evident in the man we Americans call Santa.

"Santa Claus" has become a secularized amalgamation of religious traditions about Saint Nicholas handed down from Greece, Italy, the Netherlands, Scandinavia, and Germany. In fact, his yearly arrival down the chimney to fill stockings has its root in the ancient story of Saint Nicholas, bishop of Myra (now Demre in modern day Turkey), who died on December 6, in 343 A.D.

How did he morph into the "Jolly Old Elf" children love, dressed in red and wearing shiny black boots?  The timeline below may help you with the answer...


A Timeline: the American evolution of Saint Nicholas into "Santa Claus"...

1600's: The Puritans made it illegal to mention Saint Nicholas' name. People were not allowed to exchange gifts, light a candle, or sing Christmas carols.
17th century: Dutch immigrants brought with them the legend of Sinterklaas.



1773: Santa first appeared in the media as St. A Claus.


1804: The New York Historical Society was founded with St. Nicholas as its patron saint. Its members engaged in the Dutch practice of gift-giving on Christmas Day.






1809: Washington Irving, writing under the pseudonym Diedrich Knickerbocker, included Saint Nicholas in his book "A History of New York." Nicholas is described as riding into town on a horse. (This was not the saintly bishop, but instead an elfin Dutch burgher with a clay pipe.)


1812: Irving, revised his book to include Nicholas riding over the trees in a wagon.


1821:  Editor William Gilley printed the first lithographed book in America, Childrens Friend, with a poem about a "Santeclaus", a visitor from the North. He was dressed in fur and driving a sleigh drawn by a single flying reindeer. This didactic poem had Santeclaus arriving on Christmas Eve, as opposed to December 6th, coming to reward the good children and punish the bad.


1822: Dentist Clement Clarke Moore is believed by many to have written a poem "An Account of a Visit from Saint Nicholas," which became better known as "The Night before Christmas." Santa Claus is portrayed as an elf with a miniature sleigh equipped with eight reindeer which are named in the poem as Blitzem, Comet, Cupid, Dancer, Dasher, Donder, Prancer, and Vixen. Others attribute the poem to a contemporary, Henry Livingston, Jr. Two have since been renamed Donner and Blitzen.


1841: J.W. Parkinson, a Philadelphia merchant, hired a man to dress up in a "Criscringle" outfit and climb the chimney of his store.


1863: Illustrator Thomas Nast created images of Santa for the Christmas editions of Harper's Magazine. These continued through the 1890's.


1860s: President Abraham Lincoln asked Nast to create a drawing of Santa with some Union soldiers. This image of Santa supporting the enemy had a demoralizing influence on the Confederate army -- an early example of psychological warfare.


1897: Francis P Church, Editor of the New York Sun, wrote an editorial in response to a letter from an eight year-old girl, Virginia O'Hanlon. She had written the paper asking whether there really was a Santa Claus. It has become known as the "Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus" letter.

Yew York, circa 1900


1920's: The image of Santa had been standardized to portray a bearded, over-weight, jolly man dressed in a red suit with white trim.


1931: Haddon Sundblom, illustrator for The Coca-Cola ™ company drew a series of Santa images in their Christmas advertisements until 1964. The company holds the trademark for the Coca-Cola Santa design. Christmas ads including Santa continue to the present day.


1939: Copywriter Robert L. May of the Montgomery Ward Company created a poem about Rudolph, the ninth reindeer. May had been "often taunted as a child for being shy, small and slight." He created an ostracized reindeer with a shiny red nose who became a hero one foggy Christmas eve. Santa was part-way through deliveries when the visibility started to degenerate. Santa added Rudolph to his team of reindeer to help illuminate the path. A copy of the poem was given free to Montgomery Ward customers.


1949: Johnny Marks wrote the song "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer." Rudolph was relocated to the North Pole where he was initially rejected by the other reindeer who wouldn't let him play in their reindeer games because of his strange looking nose. The song was recorded by Gene Autry and became his all-time best seller. Next to "White Christmas" it is the most popular song of all time.


1993: An urban folk tale began to circulate about a Japanese department store displaying a life-sized Santa Claus being crucified on a cross. It never happened.


1997: Artist Robert Cenedella drew a painting of a crucified Santa Claus. It was displayed in the window of the New York's Art Students League and received intense criticism from some religious groups. His drawing was a protest. He attempted to show how Santa Claus had replaced Jesus Christ as the most important personality at Christmas time.
[research and source notes]

Well, with that 1997 entry, Robert Cenedella seems to share the same point of view as the Puritans in the 1600s, so we're back to where we started.  I agree that we need to keep Christ in "Christ-mas", but I also think it's imperative that we don't forget the story of the real St. Nicholas, an early Christian who loved to help the poor.  Otherwise, we just end up with "Santa"... an old man in a red suit.
"You'll shoot your eye out, kid!" 
(Click HERE to read my past posts about St. Nicholas.)