Book Summary

Karen’s very popular children's holiday book, Looking Forward to Christmas was released shortly before Christmas of 2015. Looking Forward to Christmas was written for parents or teachers to use with children in preparation of celebrating the birth of Christ. The short verses are written in poetic form to introduce Old Testament people who were “looking forward.” Many adults have found it delightful as well. ​

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Complimentary lesson plans

These lesson plans are for teachers in parochial school settings, for parents and grandparents to use with their children, or for personal or group Bible study. If you choose to use these complimentary lesson plans, we encourage you to purchase at least one copy of the book, which is available on Amazon.


Christmas Program Guide

This Christmas program guide is for use in parochial school settings, for parents and grandparents to use with their children, or for personal or group Bible study. If you choose to use this complimentary Christmas program guide, we encourage you to purchase at least one copy of the book, which is available on Amazon.


Kirkus Review

It’s never too early to get ready for Christmas, according to this brisk collection of devotional verse for children.
 
For Christians, the season of Advent is a time of preparation. So great is the joy and mystery of Jesus’ birth that believers take four full weeks to ready themselves for that miracle. This slim volume is written in the spirit of Advent; in it, Meyer (Hootch, 2015) gives readers verse intended to help children prepare for the arrival of baby Jesus. Appropriately, then, her poems are short and eminently readable. Take, as one example, “Baby Moses”: “Baby Moses was saved from a bad king, / Just as baby Jesus was. / Moses grew up in a palace, in riches, / But he loved his people more. / Jesus, too, was rich, / But for us, He became poor. / When He was with His disciples, He said / That He did not have a place to lay His head.” Meyer’s simple language ensures that her message won’t be lost on young or old. Like “Baby Moses,” many other poems in the collection take on Old Testament themes. Thus, there are pieces here on early biblical heroes, among them Adam and Eve’s son Seth; Abraham, initiator of the covenant; and Israel’s great King David. In Meyer’s eyes, these Hebrew biblical standouts are important mainly because they pave the road for Jesus. Yet the poet saves some of her best language for Christ himself. In an early poem, she borrows a famous metaphor from the author of the Gospel of John to hail the arrival of the savior: “The Baby in the manger is the Light of the World. / He separated the darkness from the Light. / And when we celebrate the best celebrations of all, Being with our Savior in Heaven, / There will be no need for sun or moon, For He will be the only light.” Perhaps the only failing of the volume is that there’s so little poetry. Meyer offers readers just 30-odd brief works, and the result is less a book than a pamphlet. Yet maybe she’s just following P.T. Barnum’s old maxim: always leave them wanting more.
 
 Accessible holiday poetry for the younger set.


In the news

MAITLAND, FL - Within the pages of Karen Meyer’s new book, Looking Forward to Christmas, ($8.99, paperback, 9781498454957; $4.99, e-book, 9781498454964) readers will learn how the faith of the Old Testament people provides enrichment for the celebration of Christmas. Believers of today look BACK to the birth of Jesus, but for centuries the people of God looked FORWARD. This book helps parents and teachers review with children how it was for those who looked forward and it helps to show why the celebration of Christmas is so significant. Written in poetic form, the short sections are titled to introduce each theme.

“I hope readers gain a renewed understanding of the gift of the Savior,” states the author. “My book provides insights for children and adults on how the Old Testament points to the birth of Christ.”
Karen Meyer has worked with preschoolers, elementary children and high school students. She has especially enjoyed writing songs and skits, reading and telling stories, and providing games for children relating to Bible characters. In this book, she brings some Old Testament people closer to the birth of the Savior.