"three lighthearted holiday romantic romps"
"Prologue". Sales at Rossman's Department Stores are
down. At the flagship store in Chicago, family members
debate how to improve sales for the key holiday season.
Over the objection of Daniel, the Rossman brood pushed by
Meredith decide to reuse Mrs. Claus as part of their
Christmas display for the rug rats. "A Little White Trim". In Baltimore, Olivia feels
depressed as her broken ankle devastated her dream of
becoming a dancer and her boyfriend Bobby ended their six-
year relationship once he made it as a California producer
of a TV show starring an evil Olivia. She accepts the gig
as Mrs. Claus at Rossman's; soon she is offered a New York
opportunity and Bobby wants her back while her pal,
architect Woody seems so handsome. "A Tight Leather Belt". The Mrs. Claus suit has moved on
to the San Francisco store where the frazzled single mom
of Tyler, Cassie accepts the position to insure she does
not lose her job at Rossman's. She is attracted to
Buchman, but fears this will harm her five year old son.
She learns the meaning of the holiday when Tyler vanishes
and Buchman with Mistletoe the mouse comes to the rescue. "This Christmas, You Are What You Wear. The suit moves on
to Chicago where family member Meredith darns the
costume. The only jingle she cares about is the noise
from credit and debit cards, checks, and paper money. She
needs to increase sales by fifty percent or Daniel becomes
the CEO instead of her. She relearns the magic of
Christmas from Nick, the store's Santa. These three lighthearted holiday romantic romps are fun
tales starring likable protagonists who seem so right
together especially under the mistletoe. Harriet Klausner
Reviewed by Harriet Klausner
Posted December 25, 2005
Three women hired by Rossman's Department Store to play
Mrs. Claus in Baltimore, San Francisco and Chicago are
about to learn that a woman should never stop making that
Christmas list. For these Mrs. Claus stand-ins, it's a
Christmas where miracles happen, love is magical, and
changing their lives is as easy as changing their outfits.
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