Everyone knows "A Christmas Carol." What everyone doesn't know, now, is that Dickens' 1843 tale of Ebenezer Scrooge and the ghosts was just the first in a series of annual holiday books.
Mark Twain, a celebrated writer known for books such as The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, was one of the few people who didn't love A Christmas Carol. Twain had a less than favorable review of ...
For the non-theatrical people, you would be surprised at how many A CHRISTMAS CAROLs there are, and the students at Morrilton ...
Mr. Rosenblatt is an author of memoirs, novels and meditations, the most recent of which is “A Steinway on the Beach: Wounds and Other Blessings.” Since its publication in December 1843, “A ...
Has it been a while since you've read “A Christmas Carol”? The book is a 92-page novel about Scrooge, a miserly man transformed into a better person after the ghost of Marley, his former ...
When you think of A Christmas Carol, if the Muppets don't come to mind first, we really need to talk. While we often think of ...
By Michael Paulson Reporting from Dallas Sally Nystuen Vahle bursts into “A Christmas Carol” from some hellscape beneath Ebenezer Scrooge’s bed, snarling as a wretched, writhing ghost with ...
What’s Christmas without “A Christmas Carol”? There’s a reason why Charles Dickens’ classic has been made over and over: It’s always timely to remind people of the real spirit of the ...