Sights, Sounds, and Words that Invite Christmas Spirit
by Laurie Williams Sowby
Christmas
is coming, and it’s more commercialized than ever. Get the
season started with some of these products that lend themselves to
family time, good conversation, and a feeling of peace.
Popular
LDS speaker and creative thinker Merilee Boyack helps get the season
off to a spiritual start with 12
Gifts for Christ(Deseret
Book 2013, 99 pages in soft cover, $11.99). As the subtitle suggests,
the book contains Traditions,
Activities, and Devotionals for a Christ-Centered Christmas.
Rather
than a checklist of items to get done as Dec. 25 approaches, Boyack
offers thoughts on what we may give in becoming more Christlike over
the following year. Among the gifts: gratitude, obedience,
forgiveness, and faithfulness.
The
ideas, complete with quotes, songs, and scriptures, are flexible
enough to be be implemented immediately in daily devotionals and
personal study or used as a resource for family home evening over the
next 12 months.
From
Covenant Communications and Paulist Films comes a delightful new
movie, Christmas
for a Dollar
(DVD, 2013, $19.99). In 111 minutes, it tells the story a family
struggling to make ends meet during the Depression.
It’s
almost certain there will be no Christmas in the Kamp household, but
as one dollar in coins is divided up and pennies are scraped
together, they add up to heartfelt gifts and life lessons. Love
abounds. (Really, how could it miss, with a widowed father, a
crippled boy, and a horse?)
Nicely
filmed with appealing characters and situations that make for good
post-viewing discussion, Christmas
for a Dollar
is a sweet movie the family can enjoy watching together —
more than once.
Home
for the Holidays,
the 2012 Christmas concert by the Tabernacle Choir in the Conference
Center, featuring guest tenor Alfie Boe and internationally-renowned
broadcaster Tom Brokaw, is another excellent entertainment from
Shadow Mountain and the Tabernacle Choir.
Although
the CD and book offer different parts of it, the entire 90-minute
concert is wrapped up in the DVD ($24.98).
Brokaw’s
telling of Latter-day Saint military pilot Gail S. Halvorsen’s
experience during the post-World War II Berlin Airlift is accompanied
by music and photos and punctuated with an appearance by Halvorsen
himself, now 93. It’s always been a notable story, where a
prompting to give away two sticks of gum blossomed into a worldwide
effort to delight children at Christmastime.
The
drops earned Halvorsen the nicknames “Uncle Wiggly Wings”
and “The Chocolate Bomber.” As recounted here, his story
becomes a reminder that bridges to peace between nations are built
with simple, kind acts.
The
DVD also offers backstage interviews with Brokaw and Boe and
additional exclusive footage of the drops. That segment contains some
of the best 10 minutes you could spend with your family this season.
The
78-minute CD ($18.98) features all 12 songs performed by the choir
and Orchestra at Temple Square, but not the narrative. It’s
mostly light in nature, from a “Jingle Bells” that
changes keys multiple times to waltz-like pop tunes and
big-band-style arrangements apropos for the World War II theme.
A
couple of tender lullabies, a grand choral piece by Mendelssohn, and
organist Richard Elliott’s delightful “Sleigh Ride”
vary the flavor. Boe’s clear tenor shines in “Bring Him
Home” and makes a mere backdrop of the choir in what has become
the event’s standard closer, “Angels from the Realms of
Glory.”
The
classy spinoff book, Christmas from Heaven, includes
Brokaw’s word-for-word reading of “The True Story of the
Berlin Candy Bomber,” written by David T. Warner, on compact
disc. But kids and adults alike will be enchanted by black-and-white
photos as well as the sepia-toned illustrations by Robert T. Barrett
depicting the scenes from those historic air drops over West Berlin.
A
bonus is a helpful map of post-World War II Berlin and Germany, and
instructions for making your own handkerchief parachute (32 sturdy
pages in hard cover, $21.99). It’s a keeper.
Laurie
Williams Sowby has been writing since second grade and getting paid
for it since high school. Her byline ("all three names, please")
has appeared on more than 6,000 freelance articles published in
newspapers, magazines, and online.
A
graduate of BYU and a writing instructor at Utah Valley University
for many years, she proudly claims all five children and their
spouses as college grads.
She
and husband, Steve, have served three full-time missions together,
beginning in 2005 in Chile, followed by Washington D.C. South, then
Washington D.C. North, both times as young adult Institute teachers.
They are currently serving in the New York Office of Public and
International Affairs
During
her years of missionary service, Laurie has continued to write about
significant Church events, including the rededication of the Santiago
Temple by President Hinckley and the groundbreaking for the
Philadelphia Temple by President Eyring. She also was a Church
Service Missionary, working as a news editor at Church Magazines,
between full-time missions.
Laurie
has traveled to all 50 states and at least 45 countries (so far).
While home is American Fork, Utah, Lincoln Center and the
Metropolitan Museum of Art have provided a comfortable second home.
Laurie
is currently serving a fourth full-time mission with her husband in
the New York Office of Public and International Affairs. The two
previously served with a branch presidency at the Provo Missionary
Training Center. The oldest of 18 grandchildren have been called to
serve missions in New Hampshire and Brisbane, Australia.