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book cover for the boy called ChristmasA boy called Christmas

by Matt Haig
illustrated by Chris Mould
Canongate Books, Edinburgh, 2015

Age group:  primary school (about 5-9 years)
Format: 272 pages

A fun chapter book that explains how a boy with a red hat grew to live with the elves and become the Santa we now love and admire.

The story

A young boy leaves his unpleasant aunt in an attempt to find his father. After numerous adventures, he finds the elf village with his reindeer friend, Blitzen, and mouse, Miika.

My review

I wasn’t really sure what to expect from this book, but I ended up truly enjoying it!

It is simple and endearing, aimed at younger readers, and a refreshingly different story. As a chapter book, many children will need help reading it, or it is a good introduction to reading chapter books alone.Inner pages of the book A Boy called Christmas

There is some sadness in the book as Nikolas does not have a happy childhood and then, at eleven, has to face his father is not the man he had believed him to be.

I enjoyed the little hints through the story of where Nikolas would end up – a red hat, Blitzen Lake, and having a deep belly laugh (Ho Ho Ho). And there is some humour throughout (such as Blitzen liking to wee on humans as he flies overhead!)

The book is simple as it is mostly from the perspective of a simple boy, and the line drawings by Chris Mould and the textured paper add to that atmosphere.

Finding Elfhelm, the elven village only visible to believers, Nikolas and Blitzen meet Trixie the Truth Pixie, Little Noosh, a troll, more reindeer, and a surly village Chief, Father Vodol.

For young readers, it may be worth reminding them that the story is set before Father Christmas/Santa Claus so they don’t get confused.

Would I recommend A boy called Christmas? Absolutely! It is a lovely read and a nice back story for our modern Santa traditions. Matt Haig has done an awesome job with this book.

A boy called Christmas - Christmas book review