Book 71 of my 2015 book challenge
A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens
The Blurb:
With A Christmas Carol Charles Dickens created a modern fairy tale and shaped our ideas of Christmas. The tale of the solitary miser Ebenezer Scrooge, who is taught the true meaning of the season by a series of ghostly visitors and given a second chance, was conjured up by Dickens during one of his London night walks, who ‘wept and laughed’ as he composed it. Taken to readers’ hearts for its humour, compassion and message of redemption, it remains his best-loved book.
My Thoughts:
I’ve grown up watching A Christmas Carol more or less every Christmas, there are a few different versions out there and I’m quite positive I’ve not seen them all. But what the cinematic versions seem to have in common is that Scrooge is a very harsh character. While that is true in the book as well, he seems a lot gentler. So while I’ve sometimes thought the cinematic versions a bit on the scary side (except Rowan Atkinson’s adaptation, because that’s just plain funny all the way through), the book I found heart-warming.
And the message is clear, isn’t it? It’s never too late to change. Whatever change that may be.
Rating: 5 of 5















