An Alternative Christmas Reading List!

Given that Christmas is now mere days away added to the fact that I have twins who will be turning eight on the 23rd, I’ll be signing off now for a while and will be back at the end of the month with my Books of the Year (if I ever decide on them!)

For now, I’m going to leave you with an updated post from a few years ago about alternative Christmas books for the more melancholy amongst us at this festive time.

Christmas and books go hand in hand for me. Not because I read many Christmas themed books, but because my Dad and I would judge the success of our Christmas gift haul on the number of books we had been given. There was never any question that I would not buy him a book or be bought one in return. I have now spent seven Christmases without him, but I still pick out the books that I would love to be buying for him.

Maybe it is with this in mind that the books I have chosen here feature outsiders, loners and those with broken hearts. Happy Christmases get a lot of press, but I’m drawn to reading about those who don’t have it easy and whose lives are far from perfect.

Maybe this is an anti-Christmas book list, or maybe it just encapsulates my slightly melancholic reaction to the festive season, either way, these are books that capture the truth of Christmas and leave us with the only thing we can hold on to…..hope.

 

Christmas Day by Paul Durcan
Paul Durcan’s book length poem Christmas Day is top of my list because I reread it every year. It was my beloved Dad’s favourite and has become one of mine. With humour and tenderness, Durcan details spending Christmas with his friend Frank, both alone, both trying to make the best of it. He muses on his past, the poem twinkling with precious memories like Christmas lights shining in the dark. It is funny, moving and melancholic and if you get a chance to hear the audio version read by Durcan himself, then you are in for a treat.

Mr Ives Christmas by Oscar Hijuelos
Oscar Hijuelos is most well known for his loud, brash, vibrant novel The Mambo Kings Play Songs of Love, but Mr Ives Christmas sees him in quieter, more reflective form. Edward Ives is a good man, who sees the good in others and cherishes his faith. His good life is shattered when his son is shot on the way home from choir practice just before Christmas. Grief stricken, Mr Ives questions everything he thought he knew and this beautiful novel is a compassionate, tender tale of faith, familial love and, above all, forgiveness.

Hercule Poirot’s Christmas by Agatha Christie
When we think of Christmas, we can get a bit Chris Rea about it, imagining families coming together for a harmonious, joy- filled holiday. In Hercule Poirot’s Christmas, a family come together for dinner on Christmas Eve and the occasion ends with the murder of their reviled patriarch. Not all families are happy families at Christmas, particularly in an Agatha Christie novel!

The Seafarer by Conor McPherson
It is Christmas Eve in the Sharkin house in Dublin, and a group of men, all single, all lonely have come together to see in Christmas Day with whiskey and poker. However, it’s not the Baby Jesus who is coming to see them this Christmas Eve; it is the Devil who has, quite literally, come for Sharkey’s soul. McPherson crafts plays with astonishing insight into male loneliness and isolation, the need for humans to tell their stories and for those stories to be heard. As always, McPherson uses the supernatural as a gateway to the spiritual and comedy to highlight the pain of the human condition.

Less Than Zero by Bret Easton Ellis
When you think of Bret Easton Ellis’s debut (written at the age of 21 while still in college), you don’t really think Christmas. ’80s, drugs, beautiful young people, sunglasses and Los Angeles certainly, but the Festive Season? Not so much. However, this is the coldest of books as we follow Clay, returning home after his first semester at college for Christmas, who becomes increasingly disillusioned with his rich, privileged, nihilistic friends. It might be set in the sun, but Less Than Zero has a heart of ice and is the antithesis of everything we believe Christmas to stand for.

The Green Road by Anne Enright
Another novel about a family coming together at Christmas, Enright’s The Green Road is the third person narrative of the Madigan family set in pre Celtic Tiger era Ireland. Reading like a series of interconnected short stories, the novel is a moving look at the undeniable family ties that bind and also contains what must be the greatest ever piece of writing about doing the Big Christmas Shop.

Auggie Wren’s Christmas Story by Paul Auster
Paul Auster’s self-referential meta-fiction can grate with some, but who could fail to be charmed by this beautiful illustrated story of a writer who, when asked to write a Christmas story for the New York Times (yes, Auster was), goes to his cigar-selling friend Auggie for advice on how to avoid sentimentalism. Featuring Auster’s traditional story within a story format and beautifully illustrated by Isol, Auggie Wren may not be about a traditional Christmas but it reminds us that the best gifts can come from the most unusual places. A modern classic.

The Little Match Girl by Hans Christian Anderson
Set on New Year’s Eve, but looking back on Christmas, The Little Match Girl is devastating. And please bear in mind that I saw Up for the first time this week, so my threshold for devastating is pretty high. Hans Christian Anderson’s tale of a poor girl whose happy memories literally light up her final hours is not for the faint hearted.

The Santaland Diaries by David Sedaris
The essay that made Sedaris may or may not have really happened, but who cares when it is this damn funny? His story about working as Crumpet the Elf in Macy’s over Christmas, with tantruming children, flirtatious elves and singing Christmas Carols in the style of Billie Holliday is just hilarious. Like the Paul Durcan, this is best-enjoyed heard read by the author himself.

 A Christmas Memory by Truman Capote
No one deals with memory, and the rose tint we can add to it, quite like Truman Capote.  This short story, originally published in Mademoiselle magazine, focuses on a boy, Buddy and his cousin Sook and their last Christmas together. It may or may not be autobiographical, but it is undoubtedly heartbreaking and a classic I look forward to reading to my kids.

That is why, walking across a school campus on this particular December morning, I keep searching the sky. As if I expected to see, rather like hearts, a lost pair of kites hurrying towards heaven.

 

Happy Christmas everyone, may your days be merry and bright x

The 746

Cathy746books View All →

I am a 40 something book buying addict trying to reduce the backlog one book at a time!

40 Comments Leave a comment

  1. I appreciate this list. I’m not a fan of sentimental Christmas books, so I rarely end up reading any at all. But The Green Road sounds like my kind of Christmas book. And Paul Auster’s sounds like one I’d like to try. I own Mr. Ives’ Christmas, but have never read it because I didn’t know anything about it – but now I’m much more likely to dig it out!

    Happy Holidays to you and Happy Birthday to your twins! 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

  2. I also love Christmas reading, but like you, it doesn’t need to feel especially Christmassy – I like long, immersive books and also horror stories at this time of year, so my list includes Stephen King’s short stories, the new Michelle Paver, and the new Alan Hollingshurst… 🙂 I hope you have a relaxing festive period, even if it is a little melancholy.

    Liked by 1 person

  3. What a terrific homage to your father! I miss mine too, he was the most bookish person in my f2f life and yes, Christmas always meant new books under the tree.
    Here’s to all the bookish fathers out there, quietly reading in The Great Library in the Sky, and the daughters who cherish their memory:)

    Liked by 2 people

  4. Loved your list, Cathy! I am not a fan of conventional, overtly sentimental Christimas books, and I also tend to feel melancholic at this time of the year… I wish you a Merry Christmas, and I will be looking forward to your list of best books! 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

  5. Hooray for this antidote to the saccharin rich version of Christmas dished up too often….. Not that I want to be a miserable party-pooper but I get so so tired of all the articles about how to have a perfect Christmas…

    Liked by 1 person

  6. YES, I love your inclusion of the Agatha Christie! It surprises me really that there aren’t more super-popular books about Christmas and violent crime/mystery. Who among us hasn’t felt just a LITTLE like lashing out at Christmas? It’s a time of high-stakes for families, so in my view it’s the perfect setting for a murder mystery. Great list of alternatives to the usual cozy Christmas reads, love it! 😍

    Liked by 1 person

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