The Bureau of Holiday
Affairs is Andi Marquette’s next offering in what appears to be a line of vintage re-tellings. In her adaptation of The
Legend of Sleepy Hollow, by Irving Washington, I saw great promise in her ability to
create a fresh version of the spooky classic. I had hoped for a similar intriguing
concept when Marquette announced she would be writing a new twist on the
beloved A Christmas Carol, by Charles
Dickens.
Re-imagining such an iconic work must contain a fine balance
between old and new ideas. I applaud Marquette for finding that harmony as she produced completely new characters and gave the work
a modern-day feel set in the world of emails versus the land of cobblestones. The overall premise is the same,
but there is no curmudgeon
pondering over assets. Instead we have a woman concerned more with selfies than
coinage.
Robin Preston, the troubled main character, is visited by
three wildly different spirits who highlight her life during various times. And
in lieu of a deceased former business partner, we have Senior Agent Elizabeth
Tolson working for The Holiday Bureau to set things on course.
While I can completely appreciate the creativity poured into
constructing a new spin, this version left me disheartened at the missed
opportunity for a new holiday favorite. When reading a book, you want to empathize
with one or more of the characters. You want to cry with them, cheer for them,
and even fall in love with them. Unfortunately, I couldn’t find a single character
to even care about.
The spirits’ personalities were all ridiculously overdone to
the point of overkill. Since they’re already dead
maybe overkill is the wrong word? But their characterizations were outrageous
and often distracted from the story. I can understand wanting the ghosts to
have colorful personas, but for almost every character in the book to embody
standard stereotypes is repetitive.
In addition to the outlandish ghosts, there is an all-boys club of
colleagues that hates dykes, a salacious executive’s wife who seduces women,
and a mousey assistant who is actually intelligent.
But my main dislike was for Robin. This is the character to
make us believe in absolution, but I was so tired of her constant ignorance
that I wanted to help the Ghost of Christmas Future dig the grave.
I could never fully understand what her job entailed, but
she held some vague top position at an ambiguous company. She is supposedly a
high-ranking corporate shark, but I have met janitors with a more professional
decorum than the one she presents. The strong female character promoted in
the summary of this book is absent from the story.
If we are to believe Robin is up for a CEO promotion, then I
would assume her to be somewhat well mannered, highly educated, affluent in her
dialogue, and have a polish above reproach. Honestly though, a bar of soap
should replace Robin’s toothpaste.
In chapters 1-3 alone, there were several variations on the
word “fuck” and almost 50 curse words total. She
refers to near everyone as a “dick” or implies their intentions towards her as
“dick moves.” Robin’s inner dialogue is just as disappointing as I found her
horribly crass.
Not only was Robin’s vocabulary unprofessional, but so were
her actions. She allows co-workers to speak to her on a first-name basis and
her wardrobe (band tees, snake rings, skull-and-cross bone earrings) was better
suited for a groupie at a KISS concert than a businesswoman. Also her office
sounded terribly untidy with empty food containers, used coffee cups, and shoes
tossed about.
It’s these details
that instantly make the character and setting unrealistic. We have been told
that the company’s culture stands against anything progressive, thus her
informalities, wardrobe choices, and disorderly office would never be allowed.
In order for the character to have a redemption arc, then she must have something other
than poor communication skills to be redeemed from. Robin’s only faults are
that she doesn’t make time for her brother and she sleeps with a married woman.
In my opinion, these actions do not constitute someone in dire need of three
ghostly visits.
To make her look somewhat callous, the author has Robin fire
an employee only to find out later, via the Ghost of Christmas Present, that
the guy lives in hovel and has an asthmatic child. I couldn’t find Robin
terrible for this because people get fired every day and her actions were even
backed up by meeting the bottom line of the company. It was business, not
personal. Besides, the guy obviously needs a better job if working for her only
pays enough to live in deplorable conditions.
I expected Robin to
be someone who had caused significant anguish or had shunned every emotion other
than greed from her heart, but that was not the case. I kept reading, hoping
that I would find a portrayal of a truly soulless creature in need of holy
water to validate the Bureau’s presence in her life but it never came.
I also continuously
became aggravated with her lack of common sense.
When Agent Tolson arrives at Robin’s office, she asks her: “Who the hell are you?” even after Agent
Tolson has identified herself. What professional businesswoman would greet
another professional businesswoman with such a salutation?
Tolson begins to tick off a few facts such as Robin’s
birthday and college degree. Instantly, Robin retorts: “How do you have all of that information on me? That has to be illegal.
You’ll be hearing from my attorney...”
Um, ok, you
can find out more than that from a person’s Linkedin account.
The amount of uncertainty Robin has must make picking out
socks a Herculean morning effort. Throughout the book we learn: She isn’t sure why she still
has her old clothes or jewelry. She isn’t sure why she easily slips back into
art vernacular at a showing. She isn’t sure why her stomach keeps clenching.
She isn’t sure if this was all a dream. She isn’t sure why she picks up a note pad and pen. She isn’t sure if she means it
when she says “take care.” Honestly, this woman isn’t sure about anything.
Four times the Ghost of Christmas Future had to tell her
there are different and infinite possibilities for the future. Four times. And
we’re only talking within a chapter or two. If she’s up for the CEO
promotion, then I’m selling my stock.
Another grievance I held with this book was the constant
scenario of being told not shown by the author.
Example 1- …always
climbing the corporate ladder.
This phrase is repeated several times, yet we don’t learn how she has been furthering her career.There is practically nothing about late
nights at the office, the extreme wooing of clients, the various business
trips, the times she volunteered for projects or any examples of her spearheading leadership teams
on corporate campaigns.
Example 2- Both were
going at it hard.
Once again, show us. Describe the slick bodies sliding in
tandem, the swell of breasts rubbing rhythmically, and the rumpled sheets lying
on the floor. Now would even be a good time to implement all of those curse words
wandering about the pages so freely.
The
editing in this book also felt
bewildering. In most cases it was the amount of repetitive words and phrases which
had me gift-wrapping thesauruses. The word “mist” appears over 20 times in just the first 22% of the story, the
word “sugar” is repeated 14 times in a
single chapter, and the word “sparks” is used constantly to travel down thighs, fingers,
and spines.
But I also found that the sentence structure was all over
the map. Sentences were either a combination of fragments, extremely short and
choppy, or they became run-ons exceeding in 30-50+ words. At one point I was
reaching for an inhaler.
Excerpts:
Robin brushed Jill’s lips with her own, a brief, gentle touch, and then
Jill’s hands were in Robin’s hair, and Jill kissed her slowly and deeply, and
Robin’s hands were on Jill’s face, holding her in place until she pulled away,
her grip dropping to Robin’s shoulders and then to the remaining buttons on
Robin’s shirt.
A patrol boat cruised past. Robin watched it. That would be an interesting job, probably. Hard, but sort of cool.
She was about to go get something to eat when her desk phone rang. Mary from HR. Robin answered. It made her feel more human, more like she’d felt years ago. Pause.
A patrol boat cruised past. Robin watched it. That would be an interesting job, probably. Hard, but sort of cool.
She was about to go get something to eat when her desk phone rang. Mary from HR. Robin answered. It made her feel more human, more like she’d felt years ago. Pause.
And when Robin would travel, there would be others in the
scene who, while not
crucial characters, were still relevant enough to the story that they deserved
names.
- “What do you think?” dress woman asked. “I love it,” black pants responded, and Robin started.
- “Have you combined them?” Trust fund leaned in, interested. “Not really, no,” funky hipster said.
Additionally, there were an absurd amount of references to The Matrix. It was unfortunate because
not everyone has seen the movie, therefore the numerous “red pill” mentions were lost on me. It’s one
thing to reference a film, but to use it as a trope fails if your reader cannot
make the connection.
And the ending of the novel was somewhat mysterious.
Anyone could have missed the meaning of it if they hadn’t paid extra attention
to a handful of character Jill Chen’s quotes earlier in the book. I’m sure it was meant
to be clever, but it may end up as a missed revelation to some.
I do not fault the author entirely for the above points. A
beta or an editor should have caught some of these critiques but I am convinced
everyone was out drinking eggnog with the Ghost of Christmas Past.
Granted, there are places in the novel where Marquette’s
ability to weave a tale shines beautifully. It is just unfortunate that those
places are amidst vast amounts of poorly constructed paragraphs.
With all my being, I wanted to like this story. I have read one other book by
Marquette and several enjoyable blog posts by her, yet the skill-set of this
work is not comparable.
Marquette is one of publisher Ylva’s most esteemed authors so I can only
surmise it was the rush of a Christmas deadline that affected the content of
this novel. While I am not sold on this particular book, there is no doubt
Marquette’s imagination is a delightful place to be and I
look forward to the future works she will produce.
NOTE: This book was provided by the publisher
for the purpose of a review.
To purchase the book:

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