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Hardcover The Christmas Glass Book

ISBN: 0824947762

ISBN13: 9780824947767

The Christmas Glass

In the tradition of The Christmas Shoes and A Christmas on Jane Street, the heart-warming story of "The Christmas Glass" shows how, today as always, the Christmas miracle works its wonders in the human heart. In the early days of World War II in Italy, Anna, a young widow who runs a small orphanage, carefully wraps her most cherished possessions -- a dozen hand-blown, German-made, Christmas ornaments, handed down by her mother -- and sends them to...

Recommended

Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

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Customer Reviews

5 ratings

A beautifully crafted story and great read anytime of year!

I don't often find a story that immerses me as deeply THE CHRISTMAS GLASS by Marci Alborghetti. I was captivated from the very first pages. I was immediately enthralled by the story of Anna, in 1940's, war-torn Italy, wrapping her cherished hand-blown "Christmas glass" in scraps of her wedding gown to send to the safe keeping of her cousin Filomena. Filomena does over time award the precious, hand-blown ornaments to select family and friends. But, it's at a special Christmas meal gathering of holders of the cherished ornaments that you'll discover the part the "Christmas glass" plays in the healing power of this warm, yet honest story.

great!

This is a beautiful book and was delivere in a most timely manner. Thanks.

Entertaining and Endearing

I was so impressed with the beautiful way that the author intertwined important life lessons into a story that was captivating and heartwarming. I rarely purchase books, as my local public librarian can attest to, but I purchased several copies of this book to share with family and friends. I see this book being something that all generations will enjoy and I am hoping that another book comes out of this story.

Personalities described so vividly you'll be drawn into this Christmas Gathering

Marci Alborghetti accomplishes getting readers to spend their Christmas with this unique family and friends assembly. IT IS CHRISTMAS, NOT THANKSGIVING, but each in attendance at the contrived dinner have found a blessing to share. You will be left at the end of this tale recalling your own blessings and with a desire to pass along something to someone else--and it need not be an ornament of fine glass. The history behind the volatile gathering deals with a 1940 decision to send a precious family-owned set of Christmas ornaments to a cousin, Filomena, who would soon escape war-time Italy and move to America. Mystic, Connecticut, actually. She was given the responsibility of protection for the glass. The book then skipped ahead to December, 2000, and Filomena devised a plan to force a reunion between her twin daughters by agreeing to move into the "dying building", as she calls the long-term care residence, if her daughters ate Christmas lunch with her, together, in her small apartment. Filomena would cook, likely spaghetti. This was the beginning of chapters titled with the name of a person that had a significant influence on the life of Filomena. Some were family, others were strangers who became important, some were actually people connected to a descendant of Filomena. Most, in some way, had a connection to a certain piece of the Christmas Glass set. Over the years individual ornaments had been given away as mementos of special occasions/special people. A once typical book content, now rare, is a list on the page prior to Chapter One containing all People mentioned in "The Christmas Glass." It identifies who they are, their relationship to Filomena, and their world location. "The Christmas Glass" offers a different way to serve up a plot to the Christmas Day dinner, Mystic destination, attended by several on the book's cast. As you read each chapter-story, they begin to intertwine more like a Filomena-magic-carpet than a tapestry. You feel you are among those arriving for the dinner, unknowing if it will be a time of forgiveness and blessings, or a time of chaos and strife, garnished with unsolved past differences. Daniel said it best: "Sweetheart, you can't make everyone happy, and you can't be everyone's friend, especially when it comes to family." p53 Alborghetti keeps it believable, in that not all will become peaches and cream, or should we say, Christmas style 'sugar-plums and spice?' But you will be blessed by the wrapping up of Christmas for many members of this coterie. Your own Christmas, like almost all of "The Christmas Glass" characters, will be blessed, and likely in more than one way. "The Christmas Glass" was this reviewer's first experience reading the author, Marci Alborghetti. But not the last!

engaging family drama

In 1940 as Mussolini brings Italy into the European war on the side of Germany, the widow Anna runs a small orphanage that quietly has given shelter to Jewish children. Although she knows she is doing the right thing by allowing the Jews into her orphanage she has one regret. Anna fears the Fascists will destroy her family heirloom given to her by her mom, a dozen hand-blown Christmas ornaments, in retaliation for housing the Jews. Refusing to allow the kids to be kicked out, she carefully wraps the precious twelve and sends them to her married cousin Filomena, mother of twin toddlers. When the war ends, Filomena and her family leave Europe for America. Over the decades, the glass ornaments are passed around the family so that twelve different people possess one each. In 2000 octogenarian Filomena fears her family has lost its way as nothing brings them together. As the matriarch and with a nod to Anna, Filomena demands the return of the twelve ornaments to be delivered in person by the family member possessing it. This will be a Thanksgiving to remember as a lovely reunion or the end of the tenuous ties. This is an engaging family drama that feels relevant in today's shrinking world in which ironically extended families are moving further away from one another. The story line focuses a chapter each on the twelve possessors of the CHRISTMAS GLASS so that the readers learn what each person thinks with Filomena being the past owner. In some ways anecdotal rather than a linear plot, Marci Alborghetti provides a deep look at what denotes family just prior to the twenty-first century. Harriet Klausner
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