The Sears Wish Book peaked imaginations for more than 60 years. |
Do you
remember the annual Sears Wish Book? The seasonal catalog sent sugarplums dancing
around youngsters’ heads for decades. We complain when stores unveil Christmas
decorations in early fall, but the Wish Book appeared in late summer, giving kids
months to fantasize over what they would discover under the tree on Christmas
day.
A recent
newspaper article reminded me of this iconic publication that spanned 1933-1993,
featuring everything from tools to telescopes, and most important…toys. It was
a winter wonderland for a young person’s imagination months before the first
snowflakes would appear.
The Wish
Book’s now a remnant of days gone by, but thinking about it flooded me with
nostalgia. It’s like watching “It’s a Wonderful Life,” the original “Miracle on
34th Street” with little Natalie Wood, “White Christmas” with Bing
Crosby and Bob Hope, and even Laurel and Hardy’s “March of the Wooden Soldiers.”
They transport us to places and times far, far away, when we weren’t held captive
to technology or rumors of impending social upheaval. That was too long ago!
Alas, who
needs a Wish Book today when we have Amazon and the Internet? And in our
skeptical age, sentiments and values portrayed in movie classics seem sentimental
and sappy, hardly a match for the harsh and unsettling realities bombarding us
today.
Nostalgia’s
a thing of the past – literally. Some people think it’s old hat. And it’s that,
too. But I say, bring it on. The more nostalgia, the merrier. Especially during
the Christmas season.
"A Charlie Brown Christmas" has captivated viewers since 1965. |
Despite new
recordings released every year, we smile when we hear traditional holiday tunes
like “The Christmas Song,” “Jingle Bells” and “Have Yourself a Merry Little
Christmas.” The fragrance of a fresh-cut Christmas tree evokes memories from
years past, and for decades we’ve thrilled to hear hapless “Chuck” proclaim the
Good News of the first Christmas to the shepherds in the fields in “A Charlie
Brown Christmas.”
Traditional
carols remind of us what Christmas is truly about: “O Come All Ye
Faithful,” “The First Noel,” “Angels We Have Heard on High,” and “Joy to the
World.” The favorite of many, “Silent Night,” always draws me back to my
boyhood days, attending Christmas Eve services in the Hungarian-American church
in New Brunswick, N.J., where the simple tune written by Franz Gruber was
simultaneously sung in both Hungarian and English.
Nothing is
more nostalgic, in my view, than various depictions of the very first Christmas
– Mary, Joseph and the Christ child huddled in a humble stable with cows,
sheep, angels and shepherds peering over their shoulders. Ranging from simple
creations that fit in the palm of a hand to cute Precious Moments renditions to
elaborate Nativity scenes that are true works of art, they remind of the amazing
time when “the Word became flesh and made
his dwelling among us” (John 1:14).
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