Families welcome the many-sided spirit of Christmas.
Christmas, Redman reminds us, means joy and wonder. It means loved ones coming together, it means people giving their time, their resources, and the gift of song, and it means sharing stories of faith. Throughout these seasonal proclamations, readers observe three core families, each celebrating Christmas in their own way. Later, these families come together during a Nativity play. Then the congregation lights candles on a snowy evening amid stringed lights and sparkling stars. Told in rhyme, the text closes with an acknowledgement that “the world may not always shine so bright” but encourages readers to keep these values alive during the rest of the year. The story exudes a sense of community, from the church play to a festive scene at a community center to a group of people caroling at an assisted living facility. Kaulitzki’s soft-edged illustrations conjure a calm and bright atmosphere. Still, though the tale is a solid one, it doesn’t quite stand out in a crowd of similarly themed books. The town is racially diverse; one of the central families presents as Black, another is brown, and the third is light-skinned. (This book was reviewed digitally.)
Nice but feels standard.
(Picture book. 3-6)