Synopses & Reviews
Synopsis
Move over, Dickens--America's favorite storyteller has written a modern Christmas story for the ages.
Every year at Christmastime, Will and Ella Sullivan, and their father, Henry, come to a family agreement: Christmas is a holiday for other people.
At their brownstone in Harlem, stockings go unstuffed, tinsel unstrewn, gifts unbought, mistletoe unhung, chestnuts unroasted, carols unplayed, cookies uncooked, a tree un-visible, and guests uninvited.
Until guests start arriving anyway. In pairs and sixes, in sevens and tens--they keep coming. And they stay. For twelve long, hard, topsy-turvy, very messy days. That's when the Sullivans discover that those moments in life that defy hope, expectation, or even imagination, might be the best gifts of all.
Synopsis
Move over, Dickens--America's favorite storyteller has written a gift to be shared in every family, a novel destined to become as treasured as A Christmas Carol.
At Christmastime, a family of three are missing someone dear to them. Until unexpected guests begin to arrive at their empty house, filling it with Christmas memories in the making.
Listening to the song "The Twelve Days of Christmas" is a beloved holiday tradition.
Now comes a new one: Reading James Patterson's instant classic, The Twelve Topsy-Turvy, Very Messy Days of Christmas.
Synopsis
Move over, Dickens--America's favorite storyteller has written a gift, "a delightful Christmas story to be shared by the whole family" (Kirkus), destined to become as treasured as A Christmas Carol.
At Christmastime, a family of three are missing someone dear to them. Until unexpected guests begin to arrive at their empty house, filling it with Christmas memories in the making.
Listening to the song "The Twelve Days of Christmas" is a beloved holiday tradition.
Now comes a new one: Reading James Patterson's instant classic, The Twelve Topsy-Turvy, Very Messy Days of Christmas.