Christmas Jars | 
enlarge | Author: Jason F. Wright Publisher: Shadow Mountain Category: Book
List Price: $7.95 Buy New: $3.12 You Save: $4.83 (61%)
New (37) Used (17) Collectible (1) from $3.12
Rating: 104 reviews
Media: Paperback Pages: 122 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 6.8 x 5 x 0.4
ISBN: 1590384814 Dewey Decimal Number: 813.6 EAN: 9781590384817
Publication Date: October 4, 2005 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Brand New and Factory Sealed Item Fast Shipping
Tell A Friend
| |
| Also Available In:
|
| Similar Items:
|
| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Keep some tissues on hand for this holiday story that is sure to be a Christmas classic! Where had it come from? Whose money was it? Was I to spend it? Save it? Pass it on to the someone more needy? Above all else, why was I chosen? Certainly there were others, countless others more needy than I...Her reporter s intuition insisted that a remarkable story was on the verge of the front page. Rising newspaper reporter Hope Jensen uncovers the secret behind the "Christmas Jars" glass jars filled with coins and bills anonymously given to people in need. But Hope discovers much more than she bargained for when some unexpected news sets off a chain reaction of kindness and brings above a Christmas Eve wish come true.
|
| Customer Reviews: Read 99 more reviews...
Silly premise, bad writing December 1, 2008 Christy (Salt Lake City, UT USA) This may well be the worst little Christmas book you will ever read. It's based on the silly premise that jars of money, given with love, will change lives. The writing is unbelievably bad. (Richard Paul Evans doesn't come close) Strangely, this book was loaned to me by the same friend who introduced me to "At the Manger" last Christmas, which I plan to re-read, now that I've gagged my way through this one.
Christmas Jars November 26, 2008 Ann Maddox (St. Louis, MO) Christmas JarsThis is a GREAT short read that really gets you into the holiday spirit! I read it last year, and bought 8 copies this year to share with friends.
GREAT STOCKING STUFFER November 24, 2008 J. Bumgarner
This book is a great one to buy several copies of to give as Christmas book to a co-worker or teacher. It encapsulates the meaning of Christ-mas. Paying it foward..............
Worth the hour of your time November 7, 2008 Tasha Seegmiller (Southern Utah) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This is a small book, but the story is captivating, heartwarming, and inspiring without being gag me with a straw sappy. I loved how there was a plot with twists, characters with imperfections (because I really hate a perfect character, they just aren't real) and a heart warming message that would be easily achieved by all who read it, regardless of ANYTHING. I was a little skeptical when I read that the main character's name is Hope, because that kind of sets the character up to be fabulous and perfect and sickening, but she isn't like that. She is hard working, trying to make her way in the journalist industry, meets her trials head on, but still has her flaws, tough decisions and accountability for her actions. This probably took me an hour to read, maybe a little less, and with everything that is going on in the world, you really can afford an hour to feel like the world isn't all bad, to realize there are still good people, and remember that no good deed goes unrecognized.
Tonight....even you may find a jar. October 13, 2008 Mary Longorio (Eagle Mountain, UT) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
So much of our lives are a result of another's intersection. Hope Jensen was abandoned as a baby, left on a booth seat at the Chuck's Chicken `n' Biscuits, six miles outside of town on Highway 4. Abandoned, but then found by an unsuspecting Louise Jensen who always stopped by Chuck's on New Year's Eve. The very same Hope who returned to her "hometown" after college to make her name in journalism. Now alone after Louise's death, Hope returns to her apartment that first solitary Christmas Eve and finds her apartment ransacked. Everything gone, including Hope's belief that people were basically good and kind. Stepping out of the mess to catch her breath, Hope stumbles over a brown paper bag containing a jar filled with cash. Where did the jar come from? Puzzled by the unexpected windfall, Hope sets out to find out where the money came from....sure she has stumbled on a front page story. No matter which way she turns, her questions are turned aside. The most promising lead, the Maxwell family does not open up to Hope's questions; they open their hearts and bring her into their family. Hope still wants the story, but the warmth of the Maxwell's home is equally appealing. Jason F. Wright has crafted a simple, heartwarming tale about the effect one kind act can have as its recipient and the ripple effect that kindness sets in motion. Never saccharine, Wright reminds readers that every one of us has the ability and opportunity to affect the lives of someone around us. This is a hopeful (no pun intended) tale that will lift the reader and restore a bit of faith in those around them. You may even start a Christmas jar of your own.
|
|
|