Full
Text
Review(s)
"As
renowned literary critic and editor Sol Stein once said, the purpose of
non-fiction is to impart information, but the purpose of fiction is to convey
emotion. By this deceptively simple-sounding but all-important standard, The
Return of Light succeeds brilliantly as a modern Christmas fable.
When the
Christmas Deer turns five-year-old Treewing into a Christmas Tree one year,
promising him a special destiny, the young tree’s expectations are high.
But as he waits...and waits...in Lolly’s tree lot with Longbough, his best
friend, Treewing’s branches seem doomed to droop with disappointment as
family after family of "Jollies"—happy families with
children—pass him by.
"‘Do you still believe in the
Christmas Deer’s promise?’" Treewing blurted. ‘Still
believe he is all wise?’
‘Certainly!’ Longbough rippled
his needles. ‘How can you doubt him?’
Treewing felt ashamed, but
doubt gnawed like a beaver at his bark..."
Treewing must learn not only
to believe in himself and trust in the Christmas Deer, but also to think a
little differently about what it truly means to be "special." A group
of homeless people, a little boy who has lost his father in Iraq, and the grumpy
Christmas tree lot owner all play a role in helping Treewing to realize his
destiny as a bringer of light.
Readers will be particularly intrigued by the
mysterious and unavoidably allegorical Christmas Deer, similar to deer which
have played a role in human mythology from the Celtic "fairy cattle"
to the magnificent stag said to have converted St. Hubert to Christianity. The
book’s first illustration—that of a deer decorated with bells, his
antlers aglow with stars, is so beautiful that readers will return to it again
and again.
This is a parable without preachiness; a story with each word
carefully polished until it shines like a crushed aluminum can hung tenderly on
a scraggly Christmas tree in a half-empty lot. The Return of Light is destined
to be a well-loved classic in many public and home libraries and would be a good
selection for those readers seeking to teach their children the true meaning of
Christmas.
Dia Calhoun is a winner of the Mythopoeic Award for
Children’s Literature. She lives in Tacoma, Washington and is the author
of five young adult fantasy novels, three of which were selected as American
Library Association Best Books for Young Adults. They are: Avielle of Rhea, the
Phoenix Dance, White Midnight, Aria of the Sea, and Firegold."