Rating:  Summary: Entertaining!!! Review: Grisham, for the second time, moved away from his usual genre so that he could give us,the real fans, a taste of his mildly wacky side. I had a good time reading Skipping Christmas, realizing after all that this author is not your typical millionaire-snob with a mountain of a chip on his shoulder;he is funny, he cusses like the best of us and is too human to be hated. Thanks for the laughs!
Rating:  Summary: Good Escape from all the Holiday Stress Review: I enjoyed the few hours to took me to read this book. I am not usually a Grisham fan, so I had no expectations going into it. It was a quick read and a "cute" story. If you're looking for a good, "Fluffy" story, that will help you escape real life for a few hours, Read It. If you're looking for a Masterpiece of literature that will challenge your intellect, this is not the book for you.
Rating:  Summary: FUNNY AND INSPIRING Review: This book was a total surprise to me. I am a fan of Grisham, but I never knew he could be so funny. I spent most of this book laughing out loud. Then the last chapter brought me back to the reality of a "happily ever after" ending.This is a the story of a couple who want to get rid of the baggage of a materialistic world around the holidays. Their solution is to skip Christmas. They plan a lavish vacation and inform their friends. The lengths they go through to avoid the typical Christmas activities are hysterical. Then their 23 year old daughter calls and tells them she is coming home with her fiance to show him how great Christmas is with her family. They are thrown into a worldwind of activities to make their daughter happy. Great book, I would recommend it to all who need a lift after a materialistic Christmas.
Rating:  Summary: Good, But not his best Review: Skipping Christmas was a good book, and it kept me reading. I don't think this is his best work, though. I think John Grisham is at his best when he's writing legal thrillers, and Skipping Christmas most definatly isn't a legal thriller. Buy it and read it, but don't expect it to be your favorite John Grisham book.
Rating:  Summary: Ending the Season With a Smile Review: First of all, I have to confess that I love all of John Grisham's novels. My husband and I own and have read almost all of his books. I absolutely adored, The Client, The Testament, and Runaway Jury. This latest novel seemed to be a departure from his normal mystery novels, but I had heard that it was very good so I picked it up last night. Was I ever in for a treat! Good does not do the novel justice. It's GREAT. The premise of the book (a couple in their fifties who decides to "skip" Christmas) may sound a little mundane. However, the way the story is told is about as far from mundane as you can get. The book is entertaining, insightful, funny, and warm. Luther and Nora Krank live in a typical suburban neighborhood. Luther is an accountant. Nora is a stay-at-home kind of woman involved in a number of charitable organizations. Their only daughter, Blair, has just finished her graduate degree and has decided to join the Peace Corps to devote a year or two to helping others. She has been assigned to eastern Peru, and the book begins with her parents saying good-bye to her in an airport terminal. As Luther and Nora drive home from the airport, Luther's mood goes from bad to worse. He begins to silently fume about all of the annoyances brought on by the holiday season, and he concocts an idea: he and his wife will skip Christmas this year. That evening, Luther spends some time with his calculator, totalling the amount of money they spent on Christmas last year. Just as he thought. The whole thing was outrageous. Somehow, he and his wife had managed to spend a whopping $6,100 on Christmas last year. Now he has really made up his mind, and the next day he consults with a travel agent about taking a cruise. Evidence of the abhorrent expense of Christmases past and information about the cruise in hand, the next night Luther has little trouble persuading his wife, Nora, to go along with his plan. Instead of spending $6,100 on a tree, decorations, gifts, and foods they shouldn't eat anyway, they would spend half that amount on a 10-day Caribbean cruise. As the holiday season progresses, the couple is faced with a huge assortment of pressures both at home and at work to donate money to charitable organizations, to purchase a Christmas tree, to host a holiday party, and on and on and on. One of the funniest situations involves Luther's neighbors on Hemlock Street. With some prompting and organization by one particularly enthusiastic neighbor, every year, every house on Hemlock places a huge plastic snomwan on its roof. This year, Luther refuses to place his snowman on the roof, and as a result, the neighbors become irate. Suddenly Luther and Nora are subjected to cold stares along with anonymous letters and phone-calls imploring them to "free Frosty" from their basement. Some of the neighbors even arrange for carolers to stand in front of the Kronk's house, waving to Luther when he peeks out at them from behind the curtain. Without giving too much away to those who have not yet read the book, I will only say here that the hilarity of the situation reaches a climax when Luther becomes interested in his neighbor's Christmas tree. Who could have thought that Grisham could be this funny? The book ends on a high note, with a realistic, yet heart-warming ending that is free of the drippy sentiment that sometimes accompanies Christmas stories and movies. For any weary holiday planners out there and for anyone at all who has ever found Christmas to be a hectic time of year, this is one book you do not want to miss. If nothing else, the book will make you think twice about not donating to your local charities, especially the police and fire department! Skipping Christmas may may bring a few tears to your eyes in the final chapters, but it will definitely help you to bring closure to the holiday season with a smile.
Rating:  Summary: Skipping Christmas Review: Skipping Christmas was an eye opening story to read during the holidays. We changed the way we celebrate Christmas after reading this book. I was impressed Grisham could change subjects. He is an excellent writer and this new venue has made me pick him up again.
Rating:  Summary: Pleasant Review: This is not great literature but a simple pleasant read. A time to relax with an enjoyable tale which is a huge departure from other Grisham works of which I have read all.
Rating:  Summary: Fun & thought provoking Review: Well, it will not replace A Christmas Carol or A Wounderful Life but it should be made into a movie. Fun quick read and it makes you think about the meaning of Christmas in light of the events of this year.
Rating:  Summary: aha...so it was not my imagination...the book *is* racist. Review: So I apparently was not the only one to find those comments about Blair's Peruvian doctor disturbing. What a relief it must have been to those good Wonderbread suburbanites to find out that he wasn't that dark! I was given this book as a good-natured gift and despite my usual distaste for John Grisham read it with an open mind and actually found it funny and alarming at first--if you've ever made a choice, however trivial and absurd, that goes against the mindless sheeplike impulse of the mainstream (like deciding not to have children or own a television set or drink heavily at social affairs) you will appreciate the plot's initial thrust: the attempts to force the Kranks to conform, the expressions of envy and resentment at their different choices, and the accusations of "selfishness" (not to mention the standard "But think of the chillldrunnn!" line of reasoning). But after the major twist it becomes disappointingly maudlin, sentimental, and predictable as the main characters are taken back into the fold of assimilation. I really had little sympathy with the main characters--they were too shallow and unpleasant to be properly subversive, actually. However, I give this book two stars instead of one because it did possess some slight redeeming value...it persuaded me categorically that I should never, never, never move to the suburbs of Chicago, or those of any metropolitan center, for that matter. A city Christmas for me, where no one bats an eye if I don't put a cheap tacky plastic snowman on my roof or miscegenate wantonly with a loved one on the other end of the color spectrum.
Rating:  Summary: A new look at Grisham Review: I ordered this book from Amazon not quite knowing what to expect. Being a fan of Grisham's legal thrillers, I was pleasantly surprised at his ability to tell a different type of story. The book is a quick read, fun, and extremely enjoyable. The storyline incorporates lots of light humor while really making a point about the frenetic holiday season. Recommended to readers who enjoy light humor and fun, but don't look for a lengthy legal plot from Skipping Christmas. To borrow a line from CNN's movie critic Paul Clinton regarding a recent movie, 'The literary version of a Happy Meal -- tasty and filling, not particularly nutritious, but generally pleasing for all.'
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