Talk Santa to me

Linda Urban

Book - 2022

Fifteen-year-old Frankincense (Frankie) Wood tries to pull off the Christmas of her dreams as she juggles trying to keep in touch with her best friend, family dynamics at the family's Holliday shop, and recovering from world's worst first kiss.

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YOUNG ADULT FICTION/Urban Linda
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Subjects
Genres
Christmas fiction
Novels
Published
New York : Atheneum Books for Young Readers [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
Linda Urban (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
280 pages ; 22 cm
Audience
Ages 12 and Up.
ISBN
9781534478831
9781534478848
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

A high school sophomore struggles to maintain her family business's integrity and holiday traditions in this lighthearted romance by Urban (Almost There and Almost Not). Following the recent death of Francie's grandfather, her condescending Aunt Carole relocates from California to Hollydale, Ind., to help Francie's parents and good-natured Uncle Jack run Hollydale Holiday Shop, the Wood family business and a go-to yuletide decor store. The shop is known for its nostalgic holiday vibes, but despite Francie's protestations, Aunt Carole plans to implement a more "modernized" vision, hoping to improve their financial situation. These new changes aren't the only things Francie is distracted by; she's also trying to get her driver's license and save enough money to buy Uncle Jack's vintage Miata. On top of that, she's desperate for a redo of her disastrous first kiss and, upon meeting handsome Latinx-cued Hector Ramirez, who works in the neighboring Christmas tree lot, she thinks she might have a shot. Employing witty dialogue and an endless well of holiday cheer, Urban humorously spins myriad plot threads, featuring realistic teen trials, familial relationships struggling under the weight of grief, and a sprinkle of romance for an earnest seasonal offering. Ages 12--up. (Sept.)

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Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 8 Up--Francie's family is all about Christmas, and their year-round holiday store is well-known in the town of Hollydale and beyond. Francie is still mourning the death of her grandpa, who played the quintessential Santa, but she is trying to hold it together in her job at the store so that she can purchase her uncle's Miata to gain some freedom. Meanwhile, her aunt has moved back to town and wants to alter the store's longtime business plan. In a play to outwit her scheming aunt, Francie portrays Santa's intern on a local cable show that ends up going viral. As a result, Francie must spend hours writing back to all the children who write to Santa. Francie is the target of bullying by her school's hockey team for a kissing debacle when she was 13, and wonders if her new crush, the boy who works at the Christmas tree lot across the street from Francie's family store, will turn into something more. Even with the inclusion of family and bullying issues, this is a light, fun read. All characters are white, except for Francie's love interest, who is Latinx. VERDICT The perfect choice for rom-com fans who love the enchantment of the Christmas season.--Elizabeth Kahn

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

Christmas is coming, but all is not merry and bright for Frankincense Wood. Francie's best friend, Alice Kim, is going to a different school, and it's getting harder to connect. The 15-year-old is also dealing with cruel ongoing teasing from some boys following her first kiss two years earlier. Francie works at the Hollydale Holiday Shop, the family store filled with memories of her beloved late grandfather. Her overbearing Aunt Carole is implementing efficient, regimented processes in hopes of turning around the store's financial situation. When Francie offhandedly refers to herself as Santa's Intern while promoting the shop on a local cable-access show, they are inundated with letters requesting things from Santa. Meanwhile, Francie is hoping for a second chance at kissing, this time with cute transfer student Hector Ramirez. When a heartfelt letter inspires Francie to raise money to buy books for kids using local food pantries, she, Hector, and their classmate Ellie Baptiste work on a short film for a school project that also serves as a book drive fundraiser. A bonus: lots of time together with her new crush. The romantic plotline is strong but does not overshadow the treatment of friendship, grief, money worries, and more. Readers will relate to Francie's feelings of mortification about the boys' shaming of her. Francie and her family are coded White; Alice has Korean ancestry, Hector reads as Latinx, and Ellie is cued as Black. Will delight readers looking for a romance with humor and heart. (Romance. 12-16) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Chapter 1: November 11 NOVEMBER 1 I am already saying I'm sorry when I fling open the door of Uncle Jack's truck. I'm sorry for making him wait, sorry my Santa alarm didn't go off, sorry that even though I knew he was doing me a special favor by picking me up at the pre-crack of dawn on his way home from All Saints' Day Mass so I wouldn't have to ride the freezing-cold bus to Hollydale High School, I was not waiting on my front porch for him as promised. Instead I had awakened fewer than five minutes earlier, when the distant rumble of his truck turning onto Santa Claus Lane penetrated the rather excellent dream I was having about road tripping in Uncle Jack's pristine, vintage Miata with a teenage, pre-Wakanda Michael B. Jordan. From the moment I woke up, I am about to assure him, I had not dallied but had been a blur of very responsible motion, launching myself from my bed, throwing on the first-impression outfit that--thanks to the wisdom of my best friend, Alice Kim, whose smart-girl miniskirt I had borrowed as part of the ensemble--was hanging at the ready in my closet, and snagging my pre-packed backpack on the way out the door, all without whining, cursing, or turning on a single light. It is that last bit, that dressing-in-the-dark bit, that freezes me mid-sorry, because there, in the dim cab light of Uncle Jack's pickup truck, I have suddenly come face-to-skirt with a mystery greater than the heavenly ascension of souls Uncle Jack has spent the last hour at Mass pondering. For reasons that I cannot understand, I am not wearing Alice's smart-girl, first-impression miniskirt. What I am wearing is a puzzle. A riddle. A conundrum. It is also an insult to the spirit, a spike to the soul, and a 100% certain death blow to any hope of first-impressioning I might have planned. What I am wearing is a knee-length, pea-green polyester skater skirt trimmed with glittering, snow-white faux fur and covered in eye-searing, electric-red candy canes. When I say electric red, I mean electric red. When you grow up in a family like mine, there are things you know better than most people. Which adhesive works best on a yak-hair beard, for example. Where to get a size XXXL four-inch-wide patent leather belt. How to say "Merry Christmas" in sixteen different languages. You also learn pretty quickly that though you use the word all the time, there is no such thing as red . There are only reds, my Grampa Chris used to say. Reds that calm and reds that alarm. Reds that make a person feel cozy and safe. Reds that stay in your vision minutes after you've closed your eyes. Crimson and vermilion and garnet and poppy and flame. Pomegranate. Merlot. Candy apple. Rose. Christmas red and Valentine red and red that looks lonely without white and blue beside it. Brick. Scarlet. Current. Blood. Plus all the reds between those colors, reds we might not even recognize as red and haven't yet been named. So, when I say electric red, I mean electric red. The color of the candy canes on this ridiculous skirt in which I am inexplicably clad is electric and eye-searing and the exact opposite of the subtly sophisticated first impression I intended to make today. Things like this do not happen to girls whose parents are accountants. I fight my impulse to whine and curse and turn instead to beg Uncle Jack to wait just one more minute while I run inside to change. But then I notice his reaction to my outfit. A reaction that is decidedly different from mine. Uncle Jack is crying. And not with laughter. He is legit crying. "Oh, Francie," he says, wiping his eyes. "What a beautiful gesture." What? Am I still dreaming? I am about to look around for Michael B. when I notice the church bulletin on the seat next to Uncle Jack, and just like that, I understand what he means. My dear, sweet Uncle Jack has interpreted this confounding wardrobe atrocity as a deliberate All Saints' Day remembrance of his father, my Grampa Chris. I could correct him, of course, but it seems more generous to let him persist in his belief that his niece is a kind and thoughtful soul. Plus, okay, I only have about three hundred dollars in my bank account right now, and the more good feelings Uncle Jack has about me, the lower the down payment he'll probably ask when I approach him about the possibility of buying his Miata when I get my driver's license this summer. Which, if I'm perfectly honest, is already likely to be a lot lower than true market value. Uncle Jack is a softy. The oldest of his siblings and the most emotional, he tears up at hymns, coffee commercials, parades, and school plays. This is why he is a terrible Santa. As soon as a rosy-cheeked kid sits on his knee and says, "I love you," Uncle Jack starts weeping. It frightens the children. Dad took over the Santa duties when Grampa Chris died. Other than getting totally wigged-out-nervous doing our local cable show An Evening with Santa , he's pretty good at it. Not as good as Grampa Chris, of course, but nobody is as good as that. In Hollydale, Christopher Wood was Santa Claus. And then there's my Aunt Carole, for whom the only explanation is a switched-at-birth hospital mix-up. Somewhere, I am certain, there is a devious Grinch family shaking their green-tinted heads over how disappointing their sweet-tempered daughter turned out to be. "I miss him, too," I tell Uncle Jack. And it is the truth. So much the truth that I find I'm tearing up a little as well. Still, I can't go to school like this. I decide to make up some kind of story about how I wanted him to see this skirt but school is school and I'm going to run back inside and change and-- Uncle Jack takes a handkerchief from his pocket and blows his nose. "Thank you, honey," he says. Then something about his face changes. "Francie." There is a solemnity to his voice. "I understand we're running late already, but I want you to listen carefully to what I have to say and react calmly. Can you do that?" Oh, holy night. I suppose it was inevitable. Uncle Jack is going to tell me that despite my skirt, he is disappointed in me. That it is not okay that I was late and that I need to be more responsible. He will remind me that the Christmas season is stressful for my family and that Aunt Carole, in particular, is paying attention to my actions and that my dad is under enough pressure with the store finances and I need to tame my impulsive nature and do better. And he's right. Go ahead, Uncle Jack. I'm ready. "Francie." Uncle Jack takes a deep breath. "It's Lemon Square Day." Lemon Square Day. The overhead light in the cab has dimmed, but I can still make out Uncle Jack's grin. "Lemon... Square... Day?" I clutch my chest with one hand, grab the door handle with the other. "It's LEMON SQUARE DAY?" I pretend to swoon. Truly? You know nothing of life until you've had a lemon square from Fletcher's Bakery and Café. The sweet, tart lemon curd. The moist, cakey base. The ginger crumble topping. State secrets have been turned for such lemon squares. Marriages ruined. The confessionals at Our Lady of Sorrows Catholic Church and School have lines out the door the week of Lemon Square Day, so many selfish acts have been performed in their pursuit. And yet... I am wearing a pea green skirt with electric-red candy canes on it. On the first day of a new class, first-impression day. "What do you say?" asks Uncle Jack. What do I say? Impulse or impression? Confection or costume change? Dessert or dignity? Excerpted from Talk Santa to Me by Linda Urban All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.