Rating: ****
Tags: Fiction, General, Christian Life, Humorous, Humorous fiction, Man-Woman Relationships, Christmas Stories; American, Christian, Christmas Stories, Christian Fiction, Religious, Christmas, Lang:en
Summary
Imagine a year without Christmas. No crowded malls, no corny
office parties, no fruitcakes, no unwanted presents.
That’s just what Luther and Nora Krank have in mind when
they decide that, just this once, they’ll skip the
holiday altogether. Theirs will be the only house on Hemlock
Street without a rooftop Frosty, they won’t be hosting
their annual Christmas Eve bash, they aren’t even going
to have a tree. They won’t need one, because come
December 25 they’re setting sail on a Caribbean cruise.
But as this weary couple is about to discover, skipping
Christmas brings enormous consequences—and isn’t
half as easy as they’d imagined.
A classic tale for modern times from a beloved storyteller,
John Grisham’s
Skipping Christmas offers a hilarious look at the
chaos and frenzy that have become part of our holiday
tradition. John Grisham turns a satirical eye on the overblown ritual
of the festive holiday season, and the result is
Skipping Christmas, a modest but funny novel about the
tyranny of December 25. Grisham's story revolves around a
typical middle-aged American couple, Luther and Nora Krank. On
the first Sunday after Thanksgiving they wave their daughter
Blair off to Peru to work for the Peace Corps, and they
suddenly realize that "for the first time in her young and
sheltered life Blair would spend Christmas away from home." Luther Krank sees his daughter's Christmas absence as an
opportunity. He estimates that "a year earlier, the Luther
Krank family had spent $6,100 on Christmas," and have "precious
little to show for it." So he makes an executive decision,
telling his wife, friends, and neighbors that "we won't do
Christmas." Instead, Luther books a 10-day Caribbean cruise.
But things start to turn nasty when horrified neighbors get
wind of the Krank's subversive scheme and besiege the couple
with questions about their decision. Grisham builds up a funny but increasingly terrifying
picture of how this tight-knit community turns on the Kranks,
who find themselves under increasing pressure to conform. As
the tension mounts, readers may wonder whether they will manage
to board their plane on Christmas day.
Skipping Christmas is Grisham-lite, with none of the
serious action or drama of his legal thrillers, but a funny
poke at the craziness of Christmas.
--Jerry Brotton, Amazon.co.uk
For all its clever curmudgeonly edge and minor charms, no
way does this Christmas yarn from Grisham rank with A Christmas
Carol, as the publisher claims. Nor does it rank with Grisham's
own best work. The premise is terrific, as you'd expect from
Grisham. Fed up with the commercial aspects of Christmas,
particularly all the money spent, and alone for the holiday for
the first time in decades (their daughter has just joined the
Peace Corps), grumpy Luther Krank and his sweeter wife, Nora,
decide to skip Christmas this year to forgo the gifts, the
tree, the decorations, the cards, the parties and to spend the
dollars saved on a 10-day Caribbean cruise. But as clever as
this setup is, its elaboration is ho-hum. There's a good reason
why nearly all classic Christmas tales rely on an element of
fantasy, for, literarily at least, Christmas is a time of
miracles. Grisham sticks to the mundane, however, and his story
lacks magic for that. He does a smartly entertaining job of
satirizing the usual Christmas frenzy, as Luther and Nora
resist entreaties from various charities as well as increasing
pressure from their neighbors (all sharply drawn, recognizable
members of the generic all-American burb, the book's setting)
to do up their house in the traditional way, including
installing the giant Frosty that this year adorns the roof of
every home on the block except theirs. And when something
happens that prompts the Kranks to jump back into Christmas at
the last minute, Grisham does slip in a celebration of the real
spirit of Christmas, to the point of perhaps squeezing a tear
or two from his most sentimental readers (even if he comes
uncomfortably close to It's a Wonderful Life to do so). But
it's too little, too late. The misanthropy in this short novel
makes a good antidote to the more cloying Christmas tales, and
the book is fun to read. To compare it to Dickens, however,
is...humbug. 1.5-million first printing. Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.1
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Amazon.com Review
From Publishers Weekly