Christmas Letters by Debbie Macomber—Mira (J1)

This is my first Dream Team entry into eHarlequin’s 100,000 Book Challenge, and already I have a confession to make. For years I’ve seen Debbie Macomber books grace grocery store endcaps, well-placed bookstore tables and even Sam’s Club pallets, but—okay, are you sitting down for this?—I had never read one until I purchased this year’s holiday two-fer, “Christmas Wishes”. So how could a romance fiction fan and wannabe author overlook her for so long? I have no idea. Could simply be a function of my slow reading speed given my low vision, or it could be some weird notion I had that she wrote mostly westerns. In any case, I’ve “discovered” her, bought what I could find on store shelves, then promptly went to eBay where I was able to locate a huge lot of her backlist titles. Guess my TBR is formidably huge already (laughs). Just because teammate Sadhbh could read every last one of them in a single day doesn’t mean it won’t take me all year to get through them! Of course I’ll have to pause for James Patterson releases, but I plan to make serious headway with Macomber’s single title/reissues list.

On to “Christmas Letters”… In this story, Macomber builds a nice double romance along with some pretty funky and memorable characters. I mean really, how could you forget the neighbor who sees the heroine’s future in the litterbox or in her bowl of Raisin Bran?!? Then there’s K.O.’s sister Zelda who married Zach and had twin daughters they names Zoe and Zora. The Z Family I found myself calling them.

The story starts with K.O. being mortified by her sister’s intention to skip Christmas as suggested in a runaway hit parenting book “The Free Child” by Wynn Jeffries. The book even went so far as to say parents should “throw Santa under the sled”. Not wanting to see her precious five-year-old nieces deprived of Christmas, K.O. decids to take it up with the author himself when she runs into him in a coffee shop. He refuses to believe the children’s behavior got even worse after the implementation of his parenting technique. Enter the big conflict: how K.O. and Wynn feel about Christmas.

Fast forward a few days to when the neighbor lady has a vision while changing the litterbox. She sees her dear friend K.O. matched up with their building’s newest resident. Wanna guess who? Yep, K.O.’s favorite parenting author! To make things even more interesting, LaVonne (the neighbor) ends up inviting both of them to her place for dinner in true matchmaker fashion.

K.O.s drawn to Wynn, yet every time she sees her unruly nieces, she shudders at the thought of having a relationship with the man.

How do K.O. and Wynn resolve their conflict of opinions? I don’t want to spoil the story, so you’ll have to read it to find out.

The fun characters really drew me into the story. In fact the neighbor lady and sister were even more memorable than the heroine to me. Simple, concise word choices and pleasant sentence meter made this a fun, easy read for me. And not having an ample sizzle factor was actually nice for a change. (Guess I’ve been reading too many Blaze and Spices, LOL!)

That brings up an interesting discussion point. Does too much of one thing make you want more, or leave you wanting change without even realizing it? I know my tastes tend to run in cycles. How ‘bout yours?

Take care,
Jill Freeze
http://www.JillFreeze.com

Nice review Jill

Glad to see you blogging, we're not supposed to use the Dream Team
as a tag after all, we'll be getting Team emails when Lorie and Jayne
find time and energy

I read a different Christmas Kisses anthology with DM and other authors in 2007

Hugs

Sadhbh 

Dream Team 2008 Challenge blogs
No more excuses, just READ!

Welcome to the party

I discovered Macomber about the time I discovered that Harlequin was the jump start to many of my favorite author's careers.  I've read just about everything that she's written except some older hard to find titles, that I'm not willing to pay an arm and a leg for.

Sandi

Sandi

The Born Readers

Outside of a dog a book is a man's best friend. Inside of a dog it's too dark to read. Groucho Marx

Oops...

When I couldn't pull up my review when I used the Christmas tag, I went back and did it a second time. Now it's in the challenge AND my personal blog. Oh well...

Take care,
Jill Freeze
http://www.JillFreeze.com

Neat Story

I've been learning the same thing through time--that many high profile authors started out at--and are returning to--Harlequin. It's nice knowing I have a bunch of good books to look forward to. Do you have any personal favs?

Take care,
Jill Freeze
http://www.JillFreeze.com

Heyla Jill

I noticed you asked to friend me.  But I'm waiting to see if the Dream Team gets a collective blog or not to respond.  In fact, I'm using the friends option to keep track of people that I don't know how to find otherwise.  So if the Dream Team gets a blog, I will refuse your request, and if the Dream Team doesn't I will accept.  I hope this won't offend you.  It seems the only way that I can limit the amount of "friends" on the list.

"Perhaps what the average member of a group is capable of doesn't limit what a given individual can accomplish." -- Boston Globe, letter to the editor
March's Member of the Month!

Makes Sense, FF

No offense taken. I totally understand. This new community really confuses me. My Friends icons on my profile make no sense whatsoever. Wayne's pic doesn't appear yet Dee's does, and she responded to my Friend request later. I think the system will be great once all the kinks are worked out, but until then it may be a challenge to keep up with at times.

Take care,
Jill Freeze
http://www.JillFreeze.com

Debbie Macomber

I started reading Debbie about a year ago.  I had not read for pleasure in a very long time, and I purchased A Good Yarn.  It hooked me on her.  I too purchased Christmas Wishes to read during the Holidays.  Helps me unwind after a busy day to read for about an hour before I go to bed.  I actually preferred the 2nd story in her book about Nate and Susannah.  The Christmas Letters finished up too fast for me.  i have acutally purchased several of her books that have 2 stories in them.  I have enjoyed them all.  Country Brides and Darling Daughters might be 2 you might like to try.

Thanks, SoccerMom!

I appreciate the tips on books I might like. As it turns out, the two you recommended should be in my auction winnings lot Smile. Can't wait to get 'em!

Take care,
Jill Freeze
http://www.JillFreeze.com

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