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Hardcover The Great Santa Search Book

ISBN: 1585425133

ISBN13: 9781585425136

The Great Santa Search

(Part of the The Christmas Chronicles Series)

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Format: Hardcover

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Book Overview

This follow-up to Jeff Guinn's bestselling holiday favorites The Autobiography of Santa Claus and How Mrs. Claus Saved Christmas takes readers on a sleigh ride through the history of Christmas in... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

the great santa search

Excellent holiday fun. I enjoyed this as much as the first, "the autobiography of santa claus, its better to give". This will also become a must read every christmas.

A HappyHoliday

Take a happy holiday from deep, serious reads during the Christmas season. This delightful, historically educational series is an enjoyable way to get into the spirit. Great for adults to read to the kids, or to enjoy on their own. Lighter reading, but not too fluffy- pour yourself a hot chocolate and learn the history behind the myth.

Darling

This is a darling and original story that will be enjoyed by both adults and children. Contains tons of fun historical and interesting trivia not just about the history of Christmas but about famous people and events. Also keeps the Christian "reason for the season" very much in perspective. HoHoHo.

Guinn Saves the Best for Last

In THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF SANTA CLAUS, Jeff Guinn chronicled the story of St. Nicholas and the myriad and sometimes unusual people who became "Santa's helpers" over the ages, and then Layla, Nicholas' wife, has a chance to shine in the grim Puritan setting of MRS. CLAUS SAVES CHRISTMAS. But the third book is a rollicking tale of what happens when a struggling network executive decides to create a reality series called "The Great Santa Search" to find the real Santa Claus--but the cheap toy manufacturer who is sponsoring the series just may foil the day. Guinn brilliantly skewers reality television series while following Nicholas' attempt to win the Great Santa Search so that "Santa" won't be endorsing the cheaply-made toys of the sponsor.

A worthy continuation of the Christmas Chronicles!

The third volume in Jeff Guinn's Christmas Chronicles is a worthy successor to his previous books, The Autobiography of Santa Claus and How Mrs. Claus Saved Christmas. Again, he delves into the historical facts behind Christmas tradition (in this case, the introduction and evolution of the department store Santa Claus) and weaves it with his own unique vision of St. Nicholas, for the first time telling an all-original story in the present day. A frustrated television producer comes up with a brainstorm to save his family network -- a reality television show that will declare the winner the one true Santa Claus. To make matters worse, the program is being sponsored by a shady, unscrupulous toymaker who wants the winner to become the national spokesman for her shoddy toys. The only way Santa can preserve his secrecy and still save the image of Santa Claus for children all over the world is to enter the competition himself -- and win it. Guinn's new tale takes his now-classic version of Santa Claus to places he's never gone before: shopping malls to meet legions of excited children, into the workforce, and finally to a national television audience. Along the way, he introduces a wealth of new characters, and true to the spirit of this series, most of them are good at heart. The producer who concieves of the show -- he just wants a hit so he can keep making shows families can watch together. The grouchy mall manager has a secret that betrays a holiday sprit. Only the true villain of the piece shows not even a spark of decency, and even so, Santa Claus himself never gives up on her. Just as Guinn, in the past, has woven in historical figures to flesh out his books, this time out he freely plucks real-life celebrities to play roles, and he does it with a purpose, without seeming like he's name-dropping. The trials poor Santa has to go through are equally amusing, from his fitness regimen dictated by Teddy Roosevelt to his confusion when kids start asking for modern, high-tech presents like PS3s and CD burners. Through it all, Guinn manages to make a true statement about the real meaning of Christmas, about the commercialization of it, and about how Santa's true mission is rooted in faith. In fact, this book would make an excellent Christmas movie, but I doubt any producer would want to touch it without removing the overt references to Jesus and the fact that Christmas is intended to give thanks to God for the gift of His son -- and changing those references would totally ruin the spirit of the piece. (Ironically, Santa himself faces a similar dilemma in the story.) Don't get me wrong, the book is never preachy or heavy-handed, but nor does Guinn blanch from frank statements about spirituality, a pretty courageous move in this day and age. This book is a true, worthy continuation of the Christmas Chronicles, and I can only hope that Guinn continues to give us these Christmas presents for many years to come.
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