A Christmas Sonata
A young boy and his mother spend Christmas 1943 with relatives in northern Minnesota while his father is fighting in the war in Europe. They take a long journey by train to a snowy land of vast frozen lakes, deep and sparkling cold, and the most magical Christmas tree the boy has ever seen. He knows this will be the last Christmas he will spend with his cousin, who is dying. The boy's uncle overhears the two cousins say there is no Santa Claus, and in a grand gesture that is nothing short of a Christmas miracle, he restores the children's faith in the spirit of the season.
An Excerpt fromA Christmas Sonata
"Don't worry about it--there is a Santa Claus if you want there to be a Santa Claus."
"There is?"
She nodded. "That's how it works. If you think hard about it and want it enough there will be a Santa."
I went back into Matthew's room and sat by his bed. For a minute I thought he had gone to sleep and I looked at my coloring book and the picture of the pig and then Matthew moved.
"You're back."
"Mother says it's up to us if there's a Santa Claus or not."
"What do you mean?"
"She says if we want him, if we want him hard enough, there will be a Santa; and if we don't want him there won't be one."
He didn't say anything for a long time, and I thought he was thinking of something smart to say and that maybe he was going to swear. I thought if he swore about Mother I would leave the room again and not come back, and I didn't care if he was sick and dying or not, but he didn't.
He didn't say anything about Mother, and he didn't swear.
He looked at me, right into my eyes, and he said, "I want him to be."
And I said, "I want him to be too."
And he said, "No. I mean I want him to be, more than anything else in the whole world, more than all the things I've ever wanted, more than I want to live, I want him to be."