Skip to content
Scan a barcode
Scan
Hardcover Apple Tree Christmas Book

ISBN: 1585362700

ISBN13: 9781585362707

Apple Tree Christmas

Select Format

Select Condition ThriftBooks Help Icon

Recommended

Format: Hardcover

Condition: New

$14.45
Save $2.50!
List Price $16.95
36 Available
Ships within 24 hours

Book Overview

A heartwarming, nostalgic Christmas classic to be shared across generations

The old apple tree that stands near the Ansterburgs' barn house is an important part of their lives. Its sweet, juicy apples go into pies, applesauce, lunch pails, and even decorate their annual Christmas tree. It's also a favorite place for Katrina. There's a special branch where she can sit and draw and dream. The branch is her studio.

But...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Beautiful Heartwarming Story.....

I purchased this book as an upcoming Christmas gift for my children. When it arrived, I was intrigued by the charming illustrations and deeply touched by the story. I found myself lost in the captivating storyline, wondering what it would be like to live in a cozy barn with such a loving, caring family. I truly hope that the author will write a series of books about the Ansterburg family. I would love to read more about them....as, I'm sure, others feel the same. I tip my hat to the author, Trinka Hakes Noble, for sharing this treasured book with the world. Such a heartwarming gift is truly hard to find.....Thank you.

Frightening account of a family's desperate struggle to survive the horrors of nature

The Ansterburg family lives in abject poverty. Their home is a barn which they share with filthy farm animals. Their lives are a constant struggle against the elements. So desperate is their plight that they are forced to scrounge for the ancient apples produced by a vine infested tree and turn them into apple butter. The girls must give up their aspirations of an education and stay home to work alongside their mother as they anxiously try to get the work completed before a massive storm threatens their very existence. When the storm does come, it nearly collapses the barn-home and the girls are terrified to the point of hysteria. (You may need to skip this part for younger audiences who might, like the girls in the story, start to lose control of themselves with fear). After the sickening ice storm passes, it has wreaked total havoc on the lives of the Ansterburg family. It has destroyed the moldy old apple tree, the single gleaming point of light in their otherwise bleak existence. The heartless father begins to chop it into pieces for firewood to keep the family alive for one more day. After Christmas comes, it turns out the father was actually sacrificing the best interests of his family (keeping them warm) to mollify his two whiny daughters who were on the verge of catatonic depression over the loss of their Apple Tree. The father has turned portions of the tree into a drawing board for one daughter, and a swing for the other. These diversions likely eased the girls into the next few months of blinding snow storms and brutal cold, as the family desperately forged ahead into an uneasy future. Their fates are not made clear in the book, except for a haunting charcoal drawing left behind by on of the girls. It illustrates the last happy moment the family had together, the day they collected apples from the dead apple tree. In a subtle metaphor, the author hints that like the tree which was doomed from the start, the family too, may not live out the rest of the winter. If your children are very brave they may enjoy this story. The cheery drawings are in strange contrast to the harsh and frightening quality of the story, and provide a little respite from the dreadful hopelessness of the tale. This is a Christmas classic, and a book that kept me awake at night for years, a book that I still can't get out of my mind even all these years later.

A Great Chrstmas Tale

I used to check this book out from the library for my children evey year, and the beautiful story with the gentle surprise ending always touched me and my kids. Family togetherness, simple gifts, and overcoming hardship and disappointment are themes here. It is not religious, and so should be appreciated by parents and families of diverse faiths who try to keep Christmas but aren't ready to emphasize the theology found in so many Christmas books. I wrote the original publisher last year asking for a re-issue so I could send this as a gift, and it is delightful to see it again in print thanks to Sleeping Bear Press. Buy several and support small publishers!

Perfect for the Holiday Season

I was delighted to find Apple Tree Christmas is in print again. As a child who grew up in the area where Trinka grew up, I cherish the images the story churns up in my own childhood. The story is a perfect illustration of the real meaning of Christmas. It captures the snowy whimsical nature of Christmas in Michigan perfectly. A must have for any mid-western child, or any child that matter!

a piece of my childhood

When I was a little girl, my elementary school library carried this book and I constantly checked it out. I loved the beautiful illustrations. This book and the Little House series by Laura Ingalls Wilder greatly shaped my childhood and present outlook on life. Simplicity.
Copyright © 2024 Thriftbooks.com Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Do Not Sell/Share My Personal Information | Cookie Policy | Cookie Preferences | Accessibility Statement
ThriftBooks® and the ThriftBooks® logo are registered trademarks of Thrift Books Global, LLC
GoDaddy Verified and Secured