Miracle |
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Asimov's, December 1991 collected in — |
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Miracle and Other Christmas Stories | September 2011 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
On the gift-giving virtue Connie Willis has a lot of fun with gifts in "Miracle", a Christmas fantasy novelet with a contemporary setting. Gifts asked and unasked for, sought and unsought, found and not found — for these three pairs are not congruent and often are obscured and tangled among people, and even within ourselves. Our narrator is Lauren, and sharpening the Christmas rush for her is the coming Christmas office party and gift exchange; several of her co-workers are the other main characters. And then at Lauren's door arrives a visitor:
But he is not so easily deterred. Shortly:
This fellow, this spirit — "You can call me Chris for short" — is a great character. Dropped into one of Connie Willis' utterly natural settings here in "Miracle", Chris manages to fit perfectly. Like other Christmas spirits, though, some of his most ordinary statements slide into the oracularly misleading, and his commonplace actions are as baffling as his conversational exchanges. Thus Lauren's Christmas gift-planning and other efforts begin to slither awry. As a little multiply-wrapped offering of mine own, a side note here: ... This is Zarathustra's first conversational exchange and the subject is the varieties of exchange itself. Why does Zarathustra go down to men, to "sleepers," demands the hermit. Zarathustra's first answer is "I love man," but the hermit easily replies that love of man is precisely his reason for having retreated into his solitude: man is unworthy of love, love of man would be fatal for him. Zarathustra's self-correction is speedy: "Did I speak of love? I bring men a gift."Gary Shapiro A lot of conversational banter in the story concerns two famous Christmas movies, Miracle on 34th Street (1947, with Natalie Wood and Edmund Gwenn) and It's a Wonderful Life (1946, with Jimmy Stewart and Donna Reed). You needn't know them to appreciate their contrasting roles in the story, but they do soak so deeply into its texture that after several readings I'm not entirely sure I've seen all of the nuances. For the author's analysis of these films in her own voice, see the Introduction to her collection Miracle, and Other Christmas Stories. "Miracle" is a fine romantic comedy and a fine Christmas fantasy; a greatly enjoyable story.
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© 2011 Robert Wilfred Franson |
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