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briarrose1021 's review for:
The Girl Who Saved Christmas
by Matt Haig
Amelia has a lot of belief in Father Christmas. So much, in fact, that her hope was enough to kickstart Christmas when she was 8. But when the next year rolled around and Santa and the reindeer were getting ready to start his yearly trip around the world to deliver presents, the elves and their homes were attacked by trolls. Not only that, but the amount of hope needed for the reindeer to fly and for Santa to stop time was low. Too low.
But Father Nicholas isn't about to let the tradition of Christmas go. After rebuilding, he knows that all he needs is the help of Amelia once again. So he sets off for London with the little bit of magic he has to visit Amelia first. Only, when he gets to her home, she's not there. Amelia had been taken to a workhouse and instead of being the child with the most hope is not the child with the least. And Amelia's loss of hope could spell the end of Christmas forever...
I loved The Boy Called Christmas, so I was definitely excited to read this sequel. In the tradition of Charles Dickens, who also has a cameo in the story, we have a story about Christmas and the harshness of life in Victorian England blended with some trouble at the North Pole that could make fulfilling Christmas difficult, if not impossible.
It's hard to say much about this story without getting into spoiler territory, so I'll just say that if you enjoyed The Boy Called Christmas, then you will probably like this one. In addition, if you listened to the first one, then you will probably also enjoy listening to this one. It does have a different narrator - Carey Mulligan - since the main character, Amelia, is female, but she does just as wonderful a job, And though it's a minor part of the story, I think my favorite part was the scene with Queen Victoria and Albert, and the voices she used for the two of them. I still giggle a bit when I think about it.
But Father Nicholas isn't about to let the tradition of Christmas go. After rebuilding, he knows that all he needs is the help of Amelia once again. So he sets off for London with the little bit of magic he has to visit Amelia first. Only, when he gets to her home, she's not there. Amelia had been taken to a workhouse and instead of being the child with the most hope is not the child with the least. And Amelia's loss of hope could spell the end of Christmas forever...
I loved The Boy Called Christmas, so I was definitely excited to read this sequel. In the tradition of Charles Dickens, who also has a cameo in the story, we have a story about Christmas and the harshness of life in Victorian England blended with some trouble at the North Pole that could make fulfilling Christmas difficult, if not impossible.
It's hard to say much about this story without getting into spoiler territory, so I'll just say that if you enjoyed The Boy Called Christmas, then you will probably like this one. In addition, if you listened to the first one, then you will probably also enjoy listening to this one. It does have a different narrator - Carey Mulligan - since the main character, Amelia, is female, but she does just as wonderful a job, And though it's a minor part of the story, I think my favorite part was the scene with Queen Victoria and Albert, and the voices she used for the two of them. I still giggle a bit when I think about it.