-

“The Shape of Water”: A Love Story Sans Towel
The first half of The Shape of Water is a marvel of quiet visual storytelling. Elisa (Sally Hawkins) works on the cleaning staff of a mysterious midcentury lab in Baltimore. Vast corridors lead to locked doors, and while we only see what’s behind one of them, it leaves us wondering what can possibly be behind the…
-

Christmas Audiobook Review: Audible’s “Gather ‘Round the Sound”
About the audiobook: Audible’s annual holiday freebie runs 72 minutes and collects five short “holiday stories from beloved authors and great performers across the globe.” What that specifically entails are: “Zip Code 12345.” A This-American-Life-style documentary about the Schenectady headquarters of General Electric, which gets all letters addressed to Santa at that ZIP code. There are some…
-

Christmas Audiobook Review: Charles Dickens’s “A Christmas Carol”
About the book: The timeless Christmas classic, yada yada. The novella so popular it’s spawned innumerable adaptations and a new movie specifically about its writing. At this point, A Christmas Carol has been so widely adapted that reading (or listening to) the original book constitutes a lesson in how art is made. What gets stretched, and what…
-

Christmas Audiobook Review: L. Frank Baum’s “Life and Adventures of Santa Claus”
About the book: Talk about a war on Christmas! In this 1902 fantasy, the Wizard of Oz author offers a complete pagan backstory for the man with all the toys. Santa Claus, we learn was a foundling saved in an uncharacteristic burst of empathy by Ak, the Master Woodsman of the World. After a Tarzan-like childhood among…
-

Christmas Audiobook Review: Barbara Robinson’s “The Best Christmas Pageant Ever”
About the book: Barbara Robinson’s story of a troubled family of kids who unexpectedly join the Christmas pageant at the young narrator’s church was serialized in McCall’s before being published as a book in 1971. It’s since become a standby of seasonal children’s entertainment, both in book form and as a play and a 1983 TV movie…
-

Christmas Audiobook Review: J.R.R. Tolkien’s “Letters from Father Christmas”
About the book: From 1920 to 1942, J.R.R. Tolkien wrote letters to his kids from Father Christmas. The annual North Pole updates were full of juicy details about the comic exploits of “North Polar Bear,” the logistics of sorting gifts for millions of children around the world (eventually, the bear convinces Father Christmas to institute a…