The stories Father Christmas tells Tolkien’s children are funny and magical. Women often seem marginal in Tolkien’s writing. A notable omission from this world is a Mrs Father Christmas. Tolkien fleshes out the world of the North Pole with other companions, Paksu and Valkotukka, Polar Bear’s cousins, as well as Ilbereth, Father Christmas’s elf, who later assumes some of the responsibilities for Father Christmas’s correspondence, as well as Father Christmas’s enemies, the Goblins, who attack Father Christmas’s residence, or burrow underground to steal presents. Through the agency of the letters, Tolkien’s children gained access to the magical world of the North Pole, where Father Christmas is helped by Polar Bear, a kind of child surrogate, who creates all sorts of trouble with his clumsiness and thoughtlessness, but who is otherwise charming and likeable. He transforms a charming but banal family tradition into his own family mythology. This is an entertaining and intriguing book. Letters from Father Christmas is a collection of letters Tolkien wrote to his children over a period of twenty-three years, assuming the identity of Father Christmas, from the time his eldest son, John, was only three years old, until the middle of World War II when his daughter, Priscilla, was evidently outgrowing the fantasy.
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