Skipping Christmas by John Grisham
Reviewed by Gerti
My
husband says you should never read a “New York Times” bestseller,
because you’re bound to be disappointed. I’ve never followed that
advice, and this book makes me thankful for it. I found John
Grisham’s “Skipping Christmas” to be a flat out delight, even if
I didn’t get to read it till after the tree was already on the
curb.
Now
I’m a huge Grisham fan, but usually he puts out legal thrillers
that have me trying to decide whether the jury is rigged or a judge
corrupt. That’s why this is such a delightful change. It has all
the advantages of a Grisham novel – his ridiculously original
characters and brandy-smooth writing – with a whipped cream heavy
plot, so it doesn’t require more thinking than say, whether to use
bubble bath or not before you engage in a soak.
The
principals are Luther and Nora Krank, and since they are sending
their daughter off to the third world for Christmas, they decide to
forgo their usual holiday rituals (which accountant Luther finds are
costing them a fortune) and take a holiday cruise instead. Oddly
enough, that will be cheaper by half than buying all the fruitcakes,
trees, invitations and custom-made holiday cards and throwing the
huge party they usually throw. What is thrilling, however, is seeing
how it all goes wrong, for just as they are getting ready to leave,
their daughter calls and says “surprise!” she is coming home for
Christmas after all, and bringing her doctor fiancé who would really
love to see an American Christmas celebration.
Luther
has made a ton of enemies with his anti-Christmas stance, and it is
heart-warming how his neighborhood, which has turned against him for
his resistance to taking part in their theme decorating that year,
bands together to bring his Christmas miracle to pass. Grisham’s
sense of humor sparkles, and his mastery of clever plot shines as
brightly as the lit up “Frosty the Snowman” meant to be mounted
next to the Krank’s chimney. He leaves no omission without it’s
consequences, and it’s wonderful to watch how all the plot elements
gets knit together by the end as tightly as that holiday sweater your
grandmother sent you when you were 12.
I
loved this book, and felt like a child on Christmas morning that I’ve
discovered it at last. Thank you, John Grisham, for giving me and
your faithful readers the ultimate gift, tied up in a pretty holiday
bow. I’m ordered the movie they made from the book matches the
level of wit and merriment of Grisham’s “Skipping Christmas,”
but (spoiler alert!) it does not. Read the book for real holiday
laughs!