Yes Virginia, There Is a Santa

· Sold by Delacorte Press
4.0
4 reviews
Ebook
32
Pages
Eligible

About this ebook

A beautifully illustrated gift edition based on the legendary letter and essay that appeared in 1897 in The New York Sun. That letter and its editorial response have become a Christmastime legend. Little did F.P. Church know back in 1897 that his response would come to stand for the affirmation of all the joy and magic of the holiday season.

Ratings and reviews

4.0
4 reviews
A Google user
March 3, 2009
ISBN 038530854x – A Christmas favorite, the story of THAT question, how it was asked and, more importantly, how it was answered, this is a story that should be told and retold as often as possible. There are various versions, some better than others. Christine Allison writes a foreword to what is probably the most famous letter to the editor of The New York Sun and its answer. A young girl named Virginia, encouraged by her father – because "If you see it in The Sun, it's so." – writes to ask if there really is a Santa Claus. The anonymous (at the time) response assures her that, indeed, there is a Santa Claus with absolutely certainty. The book ends with information about the main characters involved: Virginia O'Hanlon, the young letter writer; Francis Church, the reluctant editor who responded; Thomas Nast, the illustrator of the book and the man who single-handedly gave us our popular image of Santa. Allison's foreword is fairly pointless, in my opinion. Illustrations by Thomas Nast are very nice – if you've seen the originals. This book is so small and the drawings have been substantially shrunk, making it impossible to really make out the fantastic detail in them. The author of Virginia's response, Francis Pharcellus Church, could not possibly have known that 111 years later, we would still be reading his eloquent letter – or that childrens' movies (ASIN: 6300215202 Yes Virginia There Is a Santa Claus, ASIN: B000YDAM1U YES VIRGINIA, THERE IS A SANTA CLAUS (ANIMATED)) would be inspired by it. That alone should tell you a lot about the power of Church's answer. More than Santa, Church assures the reader that love, good, magic and all manner of unseen wonders, including god, exist and will continue to exist. The mention of god will particularly delight some; Virginia's father's faith in his newspaper of choice will amuse and sadden the cynical reader of 2008. The language Church uses might indicate that eight year olds in 1897 were way more grammatically advanced than the 2008 edition of eight year olds, which is part of why this book will appeal to adults. It's a nice thing to have on hand, to snatch that one last year of believing from the jaws of doubt. - AnnaLovesBooks
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About the author

Francis Pharcellus Church was an editor at The New York Sun when he was handed Virginia O'Hanlon's letter and told to write a response for the next day's edition. Church dashed off his legendary editorial in a very short time, and in doing so struck a glancing blow to skeptics of every era. It was not until after his death in 1906 that it became publicly known that Church had written the reply to Virginia O’Hanlon.

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