Hey, I forgot about that. The one that came to mind was the Christmas described in the first book. Ron Miller -----Original Message----- From: Jana Jackson [mailto:jana@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] Sent: Monday, December 13, 2004 11:55 AM To: bookshare-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: [bookshare-discuss] Re: Holiday books Good morning, Ron! <Smile> Actually, I believe that several of the Little House books include Christmas stories. I love the one about Mr. Edwards playing Santa Claus. I think it may be in "Little House On The Prairie." By the way, last night I scanned "Christmas Every Morning," by Lisa Tawn Bergren, and "Tidings Of Peace," by Tracie Peterson. I'll get them validated and submitted ASAP! Sometimes I wish I could just quit my job and work for Bookshare! <LOL> Have a great week, everyone! Jana ----- Original Message ----- From: "Ron Miller" <ron@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> To: <bookshare-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Monday, December 13, 2004 8:24 AM Subject: [bookshare-discuss] Re: Holiday books > Good morning all, I believe that Little House In The Big Wood, the > first book, has a description of their Christmas together. > > It may be one of the subsequent ones, however. > > > Ron Miller > > -----Original Message----- > From: Mike Pietruk [mailto:pietruk@xxxxxxxxx] > Sent: Sunday, December 12, 2004 6:38 AM > To: bookshare-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx > Subject: [bookshare-discuss] Re: Holiday books > > > Jana > > So there's a Mitford Christmas book with Father Tim? I gotta find > time to download and read that? > > A lot of good books have been mentioned. Perhaps what impresses me > about Christmas literature is a recurring theme of the underdog > prevailing, poor > > more important than earthly wealth, values triumphing over > possessions, and similar themes. Out of whack priorities are > replaced by substance, and a sense of right replaces pompousness. We > see this in all sorts of titles from the classic Christmas Carol to > even in Rudolf the Red-Nosed Rheindeer where the much laughed and > scorned animal becomes the prized lead team member on the sleigh. It > is too bad that we cannot maintain that same theme in our lives the > remaining 49-50 weeks of the year where seemingly earthly messages > dominate the biblical one. Perhaps the message in these books, some > straightforward and other subliminal, can become internalized in how > we treat each other,, choose what we choose, and all the rest from Dec > 26 on. > > While I don't recall in which of the Laura Ingalls Wilder books it is > described, there is a sobering picture of Christmas in one of them. > The treat of eating an orange, simple homemade gifts, no 4-figure > costing gifts, et al. > > > >