The Malta Independent on Sunday

The perfect book for Christmas: Milied Imħawwad

- Milied Imħawwad is available for sale from all leading bookshops or directly online from merlinpubl­ishers.com

Authors: Ingelin Angerborn & Per Gustavsson Translatio­n: {or[ Mallia & Marie Louise Kold

What Rutan really, really wanted for Christmas was her friend Elsa to move back to her city – but it didn’t look likely to happen.

“Dear Santa, do you think I could get my friend back? If that is too difficult, could I have a real dog? Sigh, if even that’s a problem maybe I could have the toy dog in the window of the ironmonger?” the little girl wrote resignedly in her Christmas letter to Father Christmas.

Well, as all children in the world know, if you’ve been good, Santa always grants your wishes. And in fact, true to form, one day, a very strange creature pops up in her room. A blue creature with a very odd diet, who had got lost and needed Rutan’s help to get back to his home.

This is Milied Imħawwad the story of

Rutan’s Christmas: a sweet, touching Christmas story about inclusivit­y and how love and friendship can conquer all. It is the perfect book as a Christmas present, for both children and grown-ups too, because it gives a little snapshot of Christmast­ide in Sweden – where houses are decorated with stars and candles as winter sets in.

It was this Swedish spirit of Christmas which drew University of Malta professor Ġorġ Mallia and artist Marie Louise Kold to a Swedish children’s book En Klurig Jul. Written by Ingelin Angerborn, the book highlights the unique Christmas traditions in Scandinavi­an countries in a very original format: it’s an advent calendar with stories.

Mallia and Kold were so taken in by the imaginativ­e story and its nudges towards, that they translated it into Maltese. It is now been launched by Merlin Publishers as Milied Imħawwad.

It has 24 chapter-stories, so children aged 8 and over could read one each December night leading up to Christmas. Younger children can rope in the help of their parents for some bedtime reading – and there is no doubt that the grown-ups will enjoy the tiny peek into a different Christmas culture.

The translator­s even added a glossary at the back of the book specifical­ly to explain Swedish terms and traditions which Maltese children would not be familiar with.

Milied Imħawwad is the (healthier) equivalent of opening a window of an advent calendar each day – instead of a chocolate, there’s a story – beautifull­y illustrate­d and comes with no sugar rush attached!

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