The Polar Express
Over the past twenty-five years, many people
have shared stories with me about the effect that reading The Polar Express
has had on their families and on their celebration of Christmas.
One of the most poignant was told to me five
or six years ago at a book signing in the Midwest, on a snowy December evening.
As I inscribed a book to a woman in her sixties, she told me that it was the
second copy she had owned, and wanted to know if she could she tell me what had
happened to the first. "Of course," I answered.
A dozen years earlier the woman, who had no
children of her own, befriended a neighbor, a boy of about seven, named Eddie.
He would often cross his driveway to visit her.
She had a collection of picture books, which
she read to him, but around the holidays, the only story he ever wanted to
hear, over and over, was The Polar Express. One year she offered to give
him the book, but Eddie declined because he wanted to hear her read it aloud to
him, which she continued to do every year until the boy and his family moved
away.
Years later the woman learned from a mutual
acquaintance that Eddie had grown up and become a soldier. He was stationed in
Iraq. Since Christmas was approaching, the woman decided to send him a gift
box. She included candy, cookies, socks, and her old copy of The Polar
Express. She wasn't sure what a nineteen-year-old battle-weary soldier
would do with the book in an army barracks in the Middle East, but she wanted
him to have it. A month later, after the holidays had passed, she received a
letter from Eddie.
He told her he was very happy to have heard
from her and to get the box of gifts. He had opened it in his barracks, just
before curfew, with some of his fellow GIs already in their bunks. A soldier in
the next bunk spotted the book. He knew it well from his own childhood and
asked Eddie to read it. "Out loud?" he asked. "Yeah," his
buddy told him.
Eddie, quietly and a little self-consciously,
read The Polar Express. When he'd finished and closed the book, a moment
of silence passed. Then from behind him a voice called out, "Read it
again," and another joined in, "Yeah, read it again," and a
third added, "This time, louder." So Eddie did.
He wrote to the woman that he'd stood up and
read it to his comrades just the way he remembered she had read it to him.
All aboard,
One couldn't select a more delightful and exciting premise for a
children's book than the tale of a young boy lying awake on Christmas Eve only
to have Santa Claus sweep by and take him on a trip with other children to the
North Pole. And one couldn't ask for a more talented artist and writer to tell
the story than Chris Van Allsburg. Allsburg, a sculptor who entered the genre
nonchalantly when he created a children's book as a diversion from his sculpting,
won the 1986 Caldecott
Medal for
this book, one of several award winners he's produced. The Polar Express
rings with vitality and wonder.
Grow our children as best we can. They are the future, and they deserve it, also. And as an old person, this is a pretty good story, too, like for all ages.
Grow our children as best we can. They are the future, and they deserve it, also. And as an old person, this is a pretty good story, too, like for all ages.
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