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The True Story of Christmas
Stock Photo: Cover May Be Different

The True Story of Christmas Mass market paperbound - 2005

by Fine, Anne

  • Used

Description

Yearling. Used - Good. Good condition. A copy that has been read but remains intact. May contain markings such as bookplates, stamps, limited notes and highlighting, or a few light stains.
Used - Good
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Details

  • Title The True Story of Christmas
  • Author Fine, Anne
  • Binding Mass Market Paperbound
  • Condition Used - Good
  • Pages 133
  • Volumes 1
  • Language ENG
  • Publisher Yearling
  • Date 2005-10-11
  • Illustrated Yes
  • Bookseller's Inventory # K15N-00469
  • ISBN 9780440419853 / 0440419859
  • Weight 0.22 lbs (0.10 kg)
  • Dimensions 7.74 x 5.26 x 0.36 in (19.66 x 13.36 x 0.91 cm)
  • Reading level 680
  • Library of Congress subjects Christmas, Humorous stories
  • Dewey Decimal Code FIC

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With 3 stores less than 1 hour outside the DC/Metropolitan area (1 in Gaithersburg, 1 in Frederick and 1 in Hagerstown, MD), we have the largest selection of books in the tri-state area. Wonder Book and Video has been in business since 1980 and online since 1997. We have over 1 Million books for sale on our website and another 1 Million books for sale in our 3 locations. We have a very active online inventory and as such, we can receive multiple orders for the same item. We fill those orders on a first come first serve basis, but will refund promptly any items that are out of stock. Since 1980 it has always been about the books. ALL kinds of books from 95 cent children\'s paperbacks to five figure rare and collectibles. A merging of the old and new is where we started, and it is where we are today. Our retail stores have always been places where a reader can rush in looking for a title needed for a term paper that is due the next day, or where bibliophiles can get lost \"in the stacks\" for as long as they wish. In 2002 USAToday recognized us as \"1 of 10 Great Old Bookstores\", and we have been featured in numerous other newspaper and TV stories including Washington Post and CSpan.

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From the publisher

Children’s Laureate of England and a two-time winner of the prestigious Carnegie Medal, Anne Fine is the author of Alias Madame Doubtfire, Flour Babies, The Tulip Touch, and Up on Cloud Nine.


From the Hardcover edition.

Excerpt

My side of the story



Perhaps you'd care to hear my side of the story? Here am I, Ralph William Mountfield, banished to my bedroom on Christmas Day, with no one even giving me a chance to explain. But it was all Titania's fault, really. Everyone said we were just putting on an act when we stood, hands spread, mouths open, insisting there was nothing we could have done.

"Acting all injured," said Aunt Miriam.

"If you put both of them in a bag and punched it, whichever one you hit would deserve it," said Great-granny.

But everyone knows I can't act. My brother, Harry, can. He played the Slough of Despond--that means bog of despair--when our school put on Pilgrim's Progress, and it's not easy, acting a mud swamp. But all I've ever been allowed to be is one of the oysters in "The Walrus and the Carpenter" in this year's Christmas show. (And even then, everyone complained that I looked far too happy while I was being eaten.)

So I couldn't have been putting it on. But even if I were, I would have been about the only person in the house who wasn't wearing a false face and saying things they didn't mean.

Titania's Christmas Quiz proved that.



Titania



Neither Harry nor I can stand Titania. (No one can, actually.) Her mum is our mum's sister, so we are cousins, and ever since she was born she's come to stay twice a year. She wasn't too bad when she was a baby. Even as a toddler she wasn't all that much trouble, lying for hours in her little barred travel bed, talking to her fingers. (I even caught her singing to the wallpaper once--a song called "Mucking About in the Garden.")

We had a good game with her too. You see, for years, she couldn't say her rs properly, so Harry and I quite enjoyed trailing her round the house, teasing her till she told us we were "weally wery wubbish!"

But then Aunt Susan decided that Titania was "gifted." (Everyone in our family thought she was just a dreadful know-all, but there you are, that's parents for you.) And after that, Titania became intolerable. We had to sit quietly about a million times (without even being allowed to snigger) while she did her "I'm a Little Teapot" performance. Then she took to saying that she could see fairies at the bottom of the garden, and wearing frocks so stupid and frilly that once, when she lost her pretend diamond necklace, it must have been half an hour before it even managed to work its way far enough down to get found again in her knickers.

I used to have to hold her hand all the way to the shop when she wanted to buy her "fairy dust" (pink sherbet). It was embarrassing. I used to tell everyone she was off to a fancy-dress party. Harry wouldn't hold her hand at all. If it was his turn to take her, he'd simply bribe me into doing it.

"What, only fifty pence?" I'd complain.

"It's not much, is it?" he'd admit. "But it looks quite a lot, sitting next to nothing."

So I'd agree to go.

Harry gets what he wants a lot more often than I do. He's a year older than I am and Mum's favorite. (Mum says she doesn't have a favorite, but I wasn't born yesterday.)



The rest of the family



The easiest way of introducing you to everyone else is to tell you three of the things I heard them saying over the last two days.



MUM:



"Oh, Ralph. Be an angel and see if the coast is clear all the way to the bathroom."

"Ralph, darling, would you just carry this toast through for me?"

"Ralph, poppet. Be a sweetie, and rush up and fetch Daddy his aspirins."



DAD:



"I regret, Ralph, that, due to the demands of this stupid oversized turkey, this area of the kitchen is temporarily closed to idle traffic such as yourself."

"My head feels like a lump of boiled owl."

"Does anyone else think this toast tastes like buttered Brillo pads?"



UNCLE TRISTRAM



(he's my mum's brother, and he's thirty-one):

"Hi, Ralph. I was just enjoying myself throwing spuds at this cat through the window."

"Shhh! Don't distract me. I'm listing the ten things I hate most about Great-granny."

"I found this child abandoned in the bath. It's wrinkled as a prune. Does anyone want it?"



GREAT-GRANNY:



"If I had my own teeth, I'd bite you."

"By the time I was your age, I had read Milton."

"Try not to act sillier than you look."



GREAT-AUNT IDA:



"I'd love to help you in the kitchen, Tansy, but what with my very weak wrist . . ."

"I'd offer to lay the dining room table for lunch for you, Tansy, but my poor dear wrist would simply shriek, 'No!' "

"Help wash up? Oh, impossible! My wrist bone is as brittle as crispbread. Can't you find someone else?"



GRANDPA



(this will be easier to follow if I explain that Grandpa mostly walks round with his toolbox, singing to our dog, Bruno, and explaining to him how he plans to fix things):

"I can't go hunting with you, Jake,

'Cause I'm out chasin' wimmin . . ."

"As you'll see, Bruno, someone has used quite the wrong size of screw here, and that has contributed appreciably to the problem."



"Roses round the door,

Babies on the floor,

Happy vall-eee, happy vall-ee--

And yoo-oooo."



There are a few more people in the house, but that's enough to get you started.



CHRISTMAS EVE



Writing letters to Santa



On Christmas Eve morning, everyone arrived in their separate clumps, and there was all the usual fuss about bagging the best beds and warmest rooms. Great-granny wanted windows facing south. ("So she can quarrel with the moon all night," Dad suggested.)

Then Great-aunt Ida had to tell us all about her "twisted wrist." ("That makes a change," said Mum. "Usually it's a sprained ankle so she can park in the comfiest chair and not move for six days.")

After that, Titania had one of her "sensitive" fits, saying she wouldn't be able to sleep in the room she'd been given because "the wall has got stains in the shapes of ugly faces."

"You ought to feel more at home, then," Harry said.

He got sent to his room for that. So then, of course, I was the one who had to swap beds with Titania. (And still Mum claims Harry isn't her favorite.)

Then Aunt Susan dragged everyone out for a nature walk. (Harry got out of it by pretending he hadn't heard Mum say he could come down again.) There is a limit to how exciting anyone can make the life history of a holly berry sound, so I wasn't really listening when she went on to mistletoe.


From the Hardcover edition.