Tuesday, December 8th, 2009

The Christmas Bus (Hardcover)

The Christmas Bus

Product Description

The people of Christmas Valley always celebrate Christmas to the fullest extent. The mayor plays Santa, every business is holiday themed, and there’s a nativity for the kids each Christmas Eve. This town knows Christmas. But this year nothing goes according to plan. Shepherd’s Inn is full of strangers, Mad Myrtle is causing problems, and a young couple with a baby due any minute rolls in to the middle of town in their Partridge Family-style bus. It’s hardly the holiday Christmas Valley wanted–but it may be just what they need. This charming novella is sure to become a new Christmas tradition for readers who love a great holiday story.



From the Inside Flap

FRONT FLAP Amy skimmed the brochure. “It sounds like the town decided to capitalize on its name-Christmas Valley-and turned into a tourist town where everything is about Christmas.” She looked out at the pine trees. “I guess it does look kind of Christmassy up here. Look, Collin! It’s really snowing.” Collin just muttered, “Uh-huh.” He didn’t know a lot about engines or mechanical things, but he knew they weren’t going to make it over the mountain pass tonight. “Maybe we should check out this town,” he said. “Could we?” she exclaimed. “Why not?” And so it was that a rather large and brightly painted bus rolled into the quiet little hamlet of Christmas Valley. BACK FLAP Melody Carlson is the prolific author of more than 150 books for women, teens, and children. Carlson’s work has been awarded the ECPA Gold Medallion and the prestigious Rita Award, among others. She lives in Sisters, Oregon.



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Category: Christmas
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3 Responses

December 8, 2009

Other than the info on the book jacket, I had no clue what to expect from The Christmas Bus by Melody Carlson. To say I was pleasantly surprised would be an understatement. This is the story of a sixty-something pastor and his fifty-something wife, empty-nesters who have learned they will soon experience a Christmas without children or grandchildren. Edith, who operates their family-owned bed and breakfast, can not bear the thought of no little faces and feet running through their home. She laments this possibility until she hears profound words of wisdom delivered in a sermon by her husband, and then she knows what she must do. The bed and breakfast, which also serves as their home, will be open for business during the Christmas holidays – and the excitement, chaos, and confusion of the holidays will not elude their home, even if their children have chosen to do just that.

What follows is a subtle story about an odd collection of people who decide a Christmas stay at The Shepherd’s Inn is exactly how they want to spend their holiday. By the end of the story, the residents of quaint Christmas Valley have experienced the true meaning of Christmas, and Edith has answered the question posed in Hebrews 13:1-2, “Will you be ready?”


December 8, 2009

During the holidays this voracious reader likes to find special holiday reads to make the season brighter. I took a gamble on Ms. Carlson’s book as I had not read her before, but the cover art caught my eye and I took a leap of faith. Imagine my happiness when the book turned out to be a wonderful story of a minister and his wife taking in strangers to their bed and breakfast when their children cannot come home for the holidays. An eclectic bunch convene upon Pastor Charles and Edith ready or not, making the story so funny, yet touching. I will now have this book as a yearly read along with Capote’s “Christmas Memory” Karon’s “Shepard’s Abiding,” Gulley’s “Christmas in Harmony” and many others that I treasure and love.
I highly recommend this uplifting read.


December 8, 2009

THE CHRISTMAS BUS is a sweet tale by prolific author Melody Carlson that entertains while encouraging readers to embrace the true spirit of Christmas. Edith Ryan is the cheerful, glass-half-full owner of Shepherd’s Inn in the quaint town of Christmas Valley (population 2,142). Her husband, Charles, is the local pastor of Christmas Valley’s only remaining church. After 25 years, Christmas Valley has revitalized its economy by becoming the “Christmas capital of the world,” complete with Mrs. Santa’s Diner (don’t miss the “Blitzen Burgers”) and the North Pole Coffee Shop. Tourism rules.

So it’s a problem when Collin and Amy, a young married couple expecting their first baby, roll into town in a psychedelic broken-down bus nicknamed “Queenie” and detract from the carefully-staged ambiance. With no money and the birth of the baby imminent, it’s only the kind heart of Edith Ryan that turns the town’s hostility toward the young couple around — and changes Amy and Collin’s view of Christianity.

But Edith has her own set of problems. For the first time, her adult children and young grandchildren won’t be making the trip to the B&B to spend Christmas with them. In a fit of inspiration, she decides to offer a discounted Christmas package for those folks who need a place to stay — and people to be with — over the holidays. The inn soon fills up as it attracts a motley assortment of lodgers for the holidays. Lauren and Michael Thomas are a pleasant, 30-something couple who have problems that seem insurmountable. Jim Fields and his wife Carmen constantly squabble. Divorcée Leslie and her young daughter Megan are a pleasant addition to the cast of characters, giving Carlson a chance to throw in a little romantic intrigue. Albert Benson is an elderly widower who seems to have lost the joy of living.

Myrtle Pinkerton is a crotchety elderly woman who seems to promise nothing but trouble. But, as Edith reminds herself, “this Christmas was about being hospitable to strangers. And she’d certainly never had a guest who was any stranger than Myrtle Pinkerton!” Myrtle seems intent on disrupting the peace of Christmas Valley, from making a scene in the local coffee shop to getting involved with the Christmas pageant at the church. When she decides to add live animals to the program, things threaten to fall apart. Then, when Edith’s heirloom porcelain angel disappears, it seems certain that one of the guests has broken or stolen it. Will suspicion ruin their Christmas together? Edith takes her problems to God in prayer, and all ends well, as readers will expect.

The story moves along smoothly, and although most of the characters are lightly sketched, readers will bond with the delightful Edith Ryan and roll their eyes over the cantankerous Myrtle. Yes, there are clichés here — the Victorian B&B (a staple in faith fiction), the allegorical “no room in the inn” seen before in faith fiction, and the angel in disguise. But in Carlson’s capable hands (she’s a Gold Medallion and Rita Award winner), the plot line transcends the clichés and is warm and endearing. The pretty page designs and attractive cover make this a natural for gift-giving.

In a season that is too often rife with a preoccupation for material things, Carlson reminds us that one of the true gifts of Christmas is reaching out to those in need, and perhaps entertaining angels unawares.

— Reviewed by Cindy Crosby.