In keeping with other versions, parents are depicted as the “I” of the text, and Long maintains his commitment to inclusion and diversity in their characterization as he switches among settings to show them encountering Santa. The “right jolly old elf” himself is decidedly elfin, with a diminutive stature, and presents White with a ruddy complexion. It’s refreshing to see artistic acknowledgement of Christmastime outside of snowy, rural, Rockwellian settings, and the endpapers show characters to be as diverse as their homes: an interracial sibling pair decorates a tree a child who appears Black drafts a letter to Santa two brown-skinned children draw a large fireplace scene and three White-appearing children, one using a wheelchair, make cookies. Long’s central artistic conceit is revealed at the bottom of the picture, where he establishes four settings that Santa visits: a cityscape, a farm, a trailer park, and a palm-tree–dotted neighborhood. The illustrations’ soft style establishes an old-fashioned look. Flying reindeer pulling the sleigh break the cover’s right edge, leading into the book. Nick driving his airborne sleigh against the full moon. A visual treatment of an old poem that’s both nostalgic and fresh.
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