Looking for a children’s book to explore the true meaning of the holiday season? For something very different, grab “The Christmas Eve Ghost.”
In the 2010 hardcover by author-illustrator Shirley Hughes, two young children know it’s not Santa they hear at the back of their house. It’s too scary to be Santa!
Bronwen and Dylan hadn’t lived in Liverpool long; they moved there from Wales after their Da died and their Mam needed a job.
Every weekday morning, long before Bronwen and Dylan awoke, Mam, a laundress, left the children sleeping as she walked from house to house on her rounds. She hated leaving the children alone, but she always returned in time to make porridge for breakfast. On Sundays, they went to chapel together.
In the house next door, lived Mr. and Mrs. O’Riley and their two sons. Mr. O’Riley and the boys worked at the docks in good times, and they stood on street corners in bad times.
There were no washing machines in those days, and well-off people were happy to have Mam do their washing. It was a hard job, and Mam was tired at the end of the long day. Most nights, though, she saved enough energy to spin ancient tales and legends of green valleys, dragons, and ghosties.
On the afternoon before Christmas, Mam left the children at home, so she could finish shopping. She wanted to get them something special, so she warned them not to open the door and to stay quiet. All alone, Bronwen and Dylan were playing on the floor of their flat when they heard a noise. Plonk! Plonk!
That didn’t sound like Santa! Could it be a ghost, like in one of Mam’s stories?
The children ran outside as fast as they could, away from the ghost, and right into the nicest Christmas present anyone could have given them.
Based loosely on her Liverpudlian childhood, Hughes tells a tale of a Christmas that barely happens, and the gift of unlikely friendship. I loved the lesson in this book, subtle as it was, and I was absolutely smitten with the illustrations. This is the kind of book to read, savor, and discuss, particularly in this time when we gather our friends and family close.
If you plan on giving a book to your favorite kid this Christmas, here’s one to find.
“The Christmas Eve Ghost” by Shirley Hughes [32 pages, Candlewick Press, 2010, $15.99] is recommended for children ages 4 and older.
Terri Schlichenmeyer has been reading since she was 3 years old and she never goes anywhere without a book. She lives on a hill with two dogs and 12,000 books.