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THE CHRISTMAS SPIRIT by Debbie Macomber

THE CHRISTMAS SPIRIT

by Debbie Macomber

Pub Date: Oct. 18th, 2022
ISBN: 978-0-593-50010-1
Publisher: Ballantine

Opposites attract in a story of friendship and love that spans the week before Christmas 1977.

Hank Meyer, owner and bartender of a tavern in Kettle Springs, has been best friends with Pete Rhinehart, pastor of the Light and Life Church in Bridgeport, nearly their entire lives. In high school, the pair played football and ran track together. Now adults, they are single and still meet up roughly once a month to have lunch together. Over one lunch, while complaining about how difficult their lives are and how neither of them have found a woman to marry yet, they decide to switch places for a week, swapping back for Christmas Eve so Pete can run his church service. For that week, however, Hank will perform all the pastoral duties that fill Pete’s days and Pete will run the tavern that takes all Hank’s time and energy. Since this is also a story told through the eyes of a grandmother to two of her grandchildren—seen only in snippets, à la The Princess Bride—it is also a story with kissing in it, much to her grandson’s horror. Pete’s sister, Grace Ann, is the church secretary, caught up in her holier-than-thou worldview, and Millie, a lunchtime waitress in the diner where Hank and Pete meet, is also a bartender at the local strip club. Macomber has written a story that's heavy-handed in its belief in the importance—and redemptive qualities—of Christianity for individuals and communities. Gender stereotypes define each character. Women are helpmates. Men are portrayed as knowing best about everything: the Bible; love; romance; whether or not a woman’s name should be shortened in a way she explicitly says she doesn't like; and the idea that if she clearly dislikes someone, what she really needs is a kiss.

A book that seeks to be a meet-cute for two couples while reinforcing traditional Christian gender roles and partnerships.