Review: The Enchanted World of Honey Moon: A Scary Little Christmas

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Title: The Enchanted World of Honey Moon: A Scary Little Christmas
Author: Sofi Benitez
Genre: Middle Grade
Publisher: Rabbit Publishers
Source: NetGalley
Release Date: March 20, 2017
Rating: ★★★★★

Goodreads Synopsis:

Honey Moon has had it with the scary stuff, at least for Christmas. She wants Sleepy Hollow to celebrate her favorite holiday like normal people. Honey and her friends, Becky, Claire and Isabela, have one chance to take the holiday back, but it means solving a decade old mystery and ringing some bells. YIKES!

Review:

Honey’s hometown is called Sleepy Hollow. It isn’t the famous Sleepy Hollow, though the mayor likes to pretend it is. This means that instead of Christmas, he planned a Halloween festival for the town.

This story reminded me of A Nightmare Before Christmas. The town only celebrates Halloween, like the town in that movie. Honey wants to celebrate Christmas, just like Jack did in the movie.

Honey was a brave and smart character. She’s so smart that she volunteers to help an eighth grader with his essay (Honey is in fifth grade). She also took it upon herself to search for the town’s church bells so she could ring them on Christmas Eve. That was brave of her since everyone else in the town wanted to celebrate Halloween.

This is a great Christmas story for middle grade readers. It teaches you to stand up for what you believe in, even when everyone else wants something different.

Blogmas – Day 20

The ideas for my Blogmas posts are from a post on the blog Diary of a Stay at Home Mom. You can see the list of ideas in my Day 1 Blogmas post here.

Day 20

Homemade gifts are always a great idea! A last minute gift idea is Christmas cookies. You can make them yourself, or buy cookies to decorate. There are tons of kits with gingerbread cookies ready to decorate. You can decorate them and personalize them for whoever you’re giving them to. Then just wrap them up and you have a great Christmas gift!

What are your last minute gift ideas?

Review: No-one Ever Has Sex on Christmas Day

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Title: No-one Ever Has Sex on Christmas Day
Author: Tracy Bloom
Genre: Fiction
Publisher: Bookouture
Source: NetGalley
Release Date: October 24, 2017
Rating: ★★★★★

Goodreads Synopsis:

Don’t you always plan the perfect Christmas?
Don’t you always think it will be the best one ever?
And doesn’t something – usually one of your loved ones – always come along and screw it up?

Katy’s been spending too much time in the office and not enough time with her family so she wants it all: snow (fake or real), the Michael Bublé Christmas album, whatever it takes.

There’s only one thing missing as far as her husband Ben is concerned: another baby to complete their family. Katy isn’t so sure…

Ben may be playing the role of Master Elf in the pre-school nativity but he is struggling to master his own family life. With romantically-challenged friends, an ex who refuses to go away and Katy’s mum’s 64-year-old toy boy thrown into the mix, Christmas looks like it could be going off the rails… Never mind family planning, can Katy and Ben even plan to make it to the end of Christmas Day?

Review:

Well, I couldn’t resist this story when I saw the title! It sounds so funny, and it didn’t disappoint.

This story is part of a series. I haven’t read any of the other books, but I understood this one. There were a couple of parts where I was slowed down when I tried to figure out who was related. It’s a family comedy, so it’s easy to get into the story.

The families are at different stages in their lives, so they would be relatable to different readers. Katy’s family is deciding whether or not to have more children, while also dealing with stress from her job. Her mother has a new boyfriend at 74 years of age, and they have invited themselves for Christmas dinner. Meanwhile, Matthew’s family is expecting a new child and dealing with preschool drama with his twins. All of these situations made for some very funny moments.

I really enjoyed this story. It was quick to get through because it was so funny and lighthearted. It’s a great, entertaining holiday story.

Blogmas – Day 19

The ideas for my Blogmas posts are from a post on the blog Diary of a Stay at Home Mom. You can see the list of ideas in my Day 1 Blogmas post here.

Day 19

This is the last week before Christmas and I have so much to do! I still have to buy a bunch of gifts for my mom and wrap most of them. I usually like to do all my wrapping at once in one afternoon. That’s what works for me.

I also have to keep reading my Christmas books for my 12 Days of Christmas Reading. These festive stories are really getting me into the holiday spirit!

How are you preparing for Christmas?

Review: A Christmas Carol

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Title: A Christmas Carol
Author: Charles Dickens
Genre: Fiction
Publisher: Wisehouse Classics
Source: Purchased
Release Date: November 6, 2015, originally December 19, 1843
Rating: ★★★★

Goodreads Synopsis:

A CHRISTMAS CAROL is a novella by Charles Dickens, first published in London on December 1843. The novella met with instant success and critical acclaim. A Christmas Carol tells the story of a bitter old miser named Ebenezer Scrooge and his transformation into a gentler, kindlier man after visitations by the ghost of his former business partner Jacob Marley and the Ghosts of Christmas Past, Present and Yet to Come. The book was written at a time when the British were examining and exploring Christmas traditions from the past as well as new customs such as Christmas cards and Christmas trees. Carol singing took a new lease on life during this time. Dickens’ sources for the tale appear to be many and varied, but are, principally, the humiliating experiences of his childhood, his sympathy for the poor, and various Christmas stories and fairy tales.

Review:

It’s surprising that I had never read A Christmas Carol considering how much I love Victorian novels. My mom doesn’t like this story so I think that influenced me. But now I have finally read it!

Of course, there were no surprises with this story. It was exactly what I was expecting. There are so many adaptations of this story! It is such an important part of Christmas. Two Christmas movie adaptations I can think of are Ghosts of Girlfriends Past and It’s a Wonderful Life. Both are great examples of movies that were adapted to fit the story into a more modern setting.

The story has also added to pop culture. I kept thinking “Scrooge is being such a… Scrooge!” It’s funny how his name has really become a mainstream word.

This story is nice and short too. It takes less than two hours to read. This makes it the perfect book for a cozy winter night in with some hot cocoa.

Blogmas – Day 18

The ideas for my Blogmas posts are from a post on the blog Diary of a Stay at Home Mom. You can see the list of ideas in my Day 1 Blogmas post here.

Day 18

Our stockings are stuffed with toiletries and little goodies. We always get a toothbrush! And some makeup and soaps, things like that. There’s also some kind of treat or candy!

What do you stuff your stockings with?

Review: The Best Little Christmas Shop

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Title: The Best Little Christmas Shop
Author: Maxine Morrey
Genre: Fiction
Publisher: HQ Digital
Source: NetGalley
Release Date: November 3, 2017
Rating: ★★★★

Goodreads Synopsis:

Come home for Christmas to the Best Little Christmas Shop – the snowiest, cosiest place you can be!

Home for the holidays…

Icing gingerbread men, arranging handmade toys and making up countless Christmas wreaths in her family’s cosy little Christmas shop isn’t usually globe-trotter Lexi’s idea of fun. But it’s all that’s keeping her mind off romance. And, with a broken engagement under her belt, she’s planning to stay well clear of that for the foreseeable future…until gorgeous single dad Cal Martin walks through the door!

Christmas takes on a whole new meaning as Lexi begins to see it through Cal’s adorable five-year-old son’s eyes. But, finding herself getting dangerously close to the mistletoe with Cal, Lexi knows she needs to back off. She’s sworn off love, and little George needs a stability she can’t provide. One day she’ll decide whether to settle down again – just not yet.

But the best little Christmas shop in this sleepy, snow-covered village has another surprise in store…

Review:

This is a super cute story.

I loved the setting of the little village. There were a lot of comparisons to London since Cal was originally from there. But it was such a cozy little town, the perfect setting for a Christmas story.

This story has many of the stereotypical aspects of a Christmas romance. A stranger comes to the town and falls in love with one of their beloved residents. But there were some twists. One was that Lexi used to work with Formula One racers as a mechanic. She isn’t a stereotypical damsel in distress so she stands out in the story.

There also always seems to be a child that brings the couple together. Cal’s son George was that child in this story, and he was so adorable! He fit that role perfectly.

I really enjoyed this story. I recommend it for a cozy Christmas read!

Blogmas – Day 17

The ideas for my Blogmas posts are from a post on the blog Diary of a Stay at Home Mom. You can see the list of ideas in my Day 1 Blogmas post here.

Day 17.png

I’m from Canada. My family celebrates Christmas on Christmas Day. We open our stockings and gifts when we wake up. Then in the evening we have a big turkey dinner with stuffing, potatoes, veggies, and delicious turkey. We finish off the meal with treats and cookies.

How do you celebrate Christmas in your home country?

Review: Christmas on the Coast

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Title: Christmas on the Coast
Author: Rebecca Boxall
Genre: Fiction
Publisher: Lake Union Publishing
Source: NetGalley
Release Date: November 21, 2017
Rating: ★★★★★

Goodreads Synopsis:

Christmas is approaching on the island of Jersey, but Libby is feeling far from festive. Her police work and duties as vicar’s wife weigh heavily on her, she’s anxious about her troubled children, and now her best friend, Stella, has suddenly turned against her, citing a mysterious family grudge.

Libby is devastated by Stella’s unexpected coldness. But then her father shows her a diary written by her great-aunt Queenie, which sheds light on a long-hidden secret—one rooted in love, loyalty and betrayal. Writing during the Nazi occupation of Jersey in the winter of 1941, Queenie reveals a community torn apart by illicit romance, heartbreak and revenge—and by dark acts of fear and desperation.

The more Libby immerses herself in Queenie’s journal, the more she understands why its secrets still haunt her family and Stella’s. Christmas is a time of forgiveness, but is the treachery of their shared past too shameful to be forgotten?

Review:

This is another great Christmas book!

I liked that Libby is older than the typical protagonist in a Christmas women’s fiction story. She has a grown up daughter who was getting married. Usually the protagonist would be her daughter’s age. This gives a different perspective of the holidays.

There was some mystery about Libby’s background. It kept the story interesting. The War in Queenie’s story also held some mystery, since there were soldiers in the town who kept disrupting their lives. It made the story unpredictable.

At first, I didn’t realize Libby would be related Queenie. I liked Queenie’s parallel diary entries because they contrasted well with Libby’s modern story.

This is a great Christmas story.