Thomas Buckley, the career trucking company executive who wrote the story, thinks of his Christmas tale as a gift to Toronto. In a sense, itƵapp a gift of the old Toronto to a new Toronto.
“I’m an east-end boy,” Buckley told The Catholic Register.
Buckley freely admits heƵapp part of an older Catholic Toronto — the Toronto of Irish, German and Italian immigrants whose lives orbited around such institutions as St. MichaelƵapp Cathedral, Massey Hall, St. MichaelƵapp Choir School, doughnut shops and Irish cops. And heƵapp incorporated all that into his story.
His 8,300-word story is illustrated with photos of all the Toronto landmarks Buckley grew up with and that were part of his own family. Buckley was married at St. MichaelƵapp Cathedral. His mother was Rose Winterberry, a cousin of St. MichaelƵapp Choir School founder Msgr. Edward Ronan. Two of BuckleyƵapp sons were for a time enrolled at St. MichaelƵapp Choir School, and Monika, Buckley's wife, became a choir school mom.
But in his story Buckley also tackles the new multicultural reality of the city. In the end, he unveils the values and hopes that made Christmas so natural in the Toronto he grew up in.
“ItƵapp this warmth I want to share with Toronto,” Buckley said.
For Buckley Christmas is still a natural in Toronto.
The end is a surprise, and The Catholic Register wouldn’t dream of spoiling the surprise. But Buckley is only too willing to say exactly whatƵapp in his story.
“ThereƵapp faith, thereƵapp hope, thereƵapp love in a doughnut shop and thereƵapp forgiveness,” he said.
Buckley never saw himself as a writer, and heƵapp the first to say how odd it is for a guy his age who has made a living in sales for the family trucking business to suddenly launch himself into literature. But over the summer, Buckley found himself with hundreds of ideas buzzing around his brain.
Along with the ideas came a need to write it all down. By Thanksgiving he was reading his Christmas story to his assembled family. They were both astonished and impressed. Even BuckleyƵapp 18-year-old son told him The Choir Boy was an emotional experience.
Buckley attributes the whole thing to divine inspiration.
Sears took on the story as a way of reviving the tradition of Christmas store-window displays.
Buckley hopes his story helps people to experience what Christmas should be about.
“In the end, I hope they come away and say Merry Christmas to the next 50-or-so folks they meet — and mean it,” he said.
The Choir Boy connects new, old Toronto
By Michael Swan, The Catholic Register
{mosimage}TORONTO - If you’re strolling by the Eaton Centre this Christmas season, you should know thereƵapp a Christmas present waiting for you in one of the store windows.
ItƵapp not a Nintendo Wii, a box of chocolates or anything else you might feel compelled to buy before Dec. 25. ItƵapp just a story about a St. MichaelƵapp Choir School boy, his family and the build-up to Christmas. ItƵapp called The Choir Boy and will be presented in 25 installments in a downtown Sears store window between Nov. 30 and Christmas Eve. It will also be posted online at .
ItƵapp not a Nintendo Wii, a box of chocolates or anything else you might feel compelled to buy before Dec. 25. ItƵapp just a story about a St. MichaelƵapp Choir School boy, his family and the build-up to Christmas. ItƵapp called The Choir Boy and will be presented in 25 installments in a downtown Sears store window between Nov. 30 and Christmas Eve. It will also be posted online at .
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