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"The books I brought home from the library caused me to think about the origins of life and the universe," writes the author of "The Martian Chronicles," "Fahrenheit 451" and other classics. "How did it start? Where does it end? I recall Midwestern summer nights, standing on my grandparents' hushed lawn, and looking up at the sky at the confetti field of stars. There were millions of suns out there, and millions of planets rotating around those suns. And I knew there was life out there, in the great vastness. We are just too far apart, separated by too great a distance to reach one another." His mind was a rocket ship, but "Dear Santa" is a written in a clipped, chilly style, as if Dashiell Hammett had been commissioned to write a sketch for
the "Radio City Christmas Spectacular." No names are given, except for Santa. The location is not identified. The mood is dreamlike and much of the action takes place through dialogue. "Oddly enough the older Ray got, the less patience he had for adjectives and the more skeletal his style was, which for an editor is a dream," Gulli wrote in his email. "Often times authors will slip into phases especially when they start getting on in years where they will pad a very simple story with a lot of things that should be edited out of the manuscript." The story begins with a boy standing in the back of a long and slow-moving line to meet Santa. A tall stranger stops the boy and asks his age. "Twelve," the boy says. The stranger warns he may well be older when he finally gets to Santa. As the boy approaches the front, he whispers his age to Santa, who insists the boy is lying and sends him away, complaining the boy is too heavy to sit on him, as if the boy himself might be turning into Santa.
Outside, the boy spots a tall, blue-cheeked man and they walk together. The boy is convinced the man is Santa; the man gives nothing away. The boy says he will write him during the next holiday season, and insists he knows where to address the letter. As they part, the boy has a final question. "My dear Santa, sir, please tell me, do you believe in you?" "Maybe right now I'm beginning to believe," the man says. "I think I owe you thanks."
[Associated
Press;
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