Discover millions of ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more with a free trial

Only $11.99/month after trial. Cancel anytime.

The Christmas Shoes: A Novel
The Christmas Shoes: A Novel
The Christmas Shoes: A Novel
Ebook166 pages2 hours

The Christmas Shoes: A Novel

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

4/5

()

Read preview

About this ebook

Already a Christmas classic, The Christmas Shoes is an extraordinary tale based on the remarkably popular song of the same name, and adapted to a made-for-TV movie.

The heartwarming story by NewSong instantly soared to the top of the charts, mesmerizing listeners. Donna VanLiere has captured the hearts of readers everywhere.

The story follows the paths of a man and a boy through one fateful, snowy Christmas. Beautifully rendered and poignantly touching The Christmas Shoes tells a take of hope, love and faith.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateMay 27, 2008
ISBN9781429957489
The Christmas Shoes: A Novel
Author

Donna VanLiere

Donna VanLiere is a New York Times and USA Today bestselling author. Her much-loved Christmas Hope series includes The Christmas Shoes and The Christmas Blessing (both of which were adapted into movies for CBS Television), The Christmas Secret, The Christmas Journey, and The Christmas Hope, which was adapted into a film by Lifetime. She is also the author of The Angels of Morgan Hill and Finding Grace. VanLiere is the recipient of a Retailer's Choice Award for Fiction, a Dove Award, a Silver Angel Award, an Audie Award for best inspirational fiction, and a nominee for a Gold Medallion Book of the Year. She is a gifted speaker who makes regular appearances at conferences. She lives in Franklin, Tennessee, with her husband and their children.

Read more from Donna Van Liere

Related to The Christmas Shoes

Titles in the series (7)

View More

Related ebooks

General Fiction For You

View More

Related articles

Reviews for The Christmas Shoes

Rating: 4.166666666666667 out of 5 stars
4/5

24 ratings16 reviews

What did you think?

Tap to rate

Review must be at least 10 words

  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Nice book to read around Christmas, even if a little bit 'overdosed'.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Since Christmas is coming quickly, I decided to throw a couple of Christmas books into my queue to help me get into the holiday spirit. This book is based on the famous and heartbreaking song of the same name, and it was no less of a tearjerker. Robert is a successful and workaholic attorney, who has spent so much time providing his family with material wants as opposed to emotional needs, that his marriage is now falling apart. Nathan is a young boy who is losing his beloved mother to cancer. In a brief chance meeting, Nathan triggers a Christmas Miracle that transforms Robert's outlook and life forever. The writing is mediocre and a tad juvenile, but the parable is perfectly fitting for the season, and is a testament to the enormous effect that a tiny event can have on the grand scheme of things. The book is faith based, so some may prefer to stay away, but most will find it touching and inspirational regardless.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I have watched the movie based on this book and heard the song for a few years , when i saw the book i had to read it. This is a awesome book, i cried almost the whole way through it.The way the two stories unfold together is wonderful and the intersecting is great .. and then to have them meet again is wonderful . very moving
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    If any of you know the song the Christmas shoes, this novel pulls on your heart strings in the exact same way. This story was fantastic and I think I might reread it during the holiday season, although it can bring you down to earth anytime of the year. It brought home points like what is important in my life? And, how do I treat my loved ones? It was a short book, almost more of a novella than a novel (which was nice for challenges, he he.) I did find some of the writing somewhat simplistic and a bit too preachy. Otherwise, great book for a soul search.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    tearjerker!
    This is a very short read,but it had a slow start.Once all the elements of the story started coming together,it picked up speed and "got ya" at the end.
    Good holiday story,reminds you it is not the Mall or the shopping or other distractions that are important!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This is a very moving story and one that has meaning in every chapter. Each and every character has something to give to one another. This parallels with most people's lives and is one that will surely make you quiver as it reminds you of your relationships thoughout your memories. Take heart and you WILL remember his story for a long time.
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    Okay, I'm a Christmas freak. There really is no other way to put it. I just love everything about Christmas: the ambience, the decorations, the nice, cold winters, the food, the music (that I start to listen to in September), the movies (that I tend to watch all year round), and so much more. Except for the Christmas books. For some reason, I have yet to find a Christmas book that I truly love (in the interest of full disclosure I will say that I have yet to read A Christmas Carol. I know...). Unfortunately, The Christmas Shoes was no exception. I didn't mind the cliches, I didn't mind the heartwarming-ness that can sometimes make people want to gag, I didn't mind the sweetness. What I did mind was the fact that apparently I was supposed to feel something for these characters, yet I couldn't because they weren't at all developed. Every single character fell into their stereotypic roles. And sometimes I can deal with that. But in The Christmas Shoes I couldn't because there was just nothing other than the stereotypical characters there. I'm supposed to feel depressed, at first, because of all that sad things that were happening and then feel oh so happy when the resolution rolled around. Maybe I would have...if the characters weren't paper thin development wise. But since they were, I didn't feel anything for any of them and in turn, I didn't feel what I was supposed to be feeling while reading the book. So, unfortunately, I found The Christmas Shoes to be a huge disappointment. I just didn't find anything reedemable about it. It was a quick page-turner, but mostly because the book is so short. It would have been better with a couple hundred more pages to flesh some of the characters out. I, however, will still check out the movie as it seems eons better than the book.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I loved the song and the book. I couldn't help but cry through most of the story!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    A great book but very heartwrenching. You need to have at least tissues if not packages of handkerchiefs for this one!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Nice tear jerker that will get one in the sprirt of the season. An easy read that will not tax one too much.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    So technically this is an adult book, but there is nothing in it that makes it unsuitable for a younger audience, the only difference is that the main characters are not teenagers.As my mom called it, this was a 52-handkerchief book. I had to keep putting the book down to go grab a tissue, that is until about my fifth time up when I finally just grabbed the box. Although this story is a tearjerker, it is also very uplifting, and heart warming at the same time.The story is centered around two different families. Robert, his wife, two daughters, and mother and also eight year-old Nathan, his mother, father, sister, and grandmother. It might sound like a lot to follow but its not. The book is constantly jumping from family to family, and changing perspective, which did get confusing a couple of times where I wouldn’t know who was talking at first, but if I just read a few more sentences I could always figure it out.This is book one in author Donna VanLieres’ Christmas Hope Series and I look forward to reading the rest! I already have a copy of The Christmas Promise, which I’ve already started.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    I’m sure you’ve heard the Christmas song about the little boy who wants to buy a special pair of shoes for his Mama on Christmas. She’s dying and he wants her to feel special when she meets Jesus. Well, VanLiere expands that song into this novella. The writing is trite and the story line, melodramatic and manipulative. There are a few redeeming qualities. I really did like the interactions of the Andrews family: Nathan, dad Jack and mom Maggie. I also really liked Nathan’s teacher and the ways she tried to help this small boy deal with the sadness and stress of his mother’s illness. But I was totally turned off and unbelieving of the great turnaround that Robert makes. I knew the story was headed there (I have heard the song numerous times), but didn’t feel that VanLiere made it believable. Final verdict: Call me a Scrooge or a Grinch; I grew to hate the song and the book isn’t much better.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I had recently been lamenting the fact that I hadn't read a true tear-jerker yet this year. I have been know to get a bit misty-eyed at certain scenes, but it is a rare book that makes me actually shed tears. The Christmas Shoes did exactly that and more. It made me cry buckets both while reading it and afterwards while merely thinking about it, and again while trying to write this review. There is a profound and beautiful message packed into this simple short story. It may have been difficult to read at times, evoking many deep and heartfelt emotions, but it was worth every moment. I have been left thinking about it long after turning the last page, which is what I hope for every time I pick up a book to read. My favorite movie at Christmastime is It's a Wonderful Life, and The Christmas Shoes reminded me of it in some ways. Both stories are about the serendipitous nature of life and how each of our lives are important, intertwined with the lives of others, and can affect anyone with whom we come in contact in unexpected ways. It may not seem like some small thing we've done even mattered, but it's possible that it was the thing that utterly changed another person's life, all by us merely being in the right place at the right time. The meeting between Robert and Nathan in The Christmas Shoes was very brief, but during that short encounter, Nathan gave Robert a much-needed wake-up call, while Robert opened his heart enough to fulfill Nathan's Christmas wish for his dying mother. It all makes me wonder in what mysterious and unknown ways I might have affected the life of someone with whom I've come in contact, over the forty years of my own life.I believe that The Christmas Shoes is the first book I've read that alternates between first and third person perspective. Robert's scenes are written in his first-person voice, while the rest of the book is written from the third-person point of view of various other characters. I didn't really have any difficulty following it, but it did take a little getting used to. Overall, I think this style worked well. Robert was the character whose life seemed to be the most affected, so it made sense to have his part be in first person. No matter what voice they were speaking in, all the characters were vividly brought to life in a touching and realistic way. In the beginning, Robert is difficult to like. He is a rather selfish workaholic attorney who has become very materialistic and cynical (think shades of Scrooge from A Christmas Carol). His life is about to fall apart with his wife asking for a divorce after Christmas, but he still can't seem to figure out what he truly wants in life or how to make it happen. He also isn't very nice to some of the other characters in the story, and never really spends any time with his family. Once I came to the realization that Robert is a man who has lost his way and doesn't comprehend what is truly important in life, I was able to feel more sympathetic toward him, but real change doesn't come for him until he meets up with an eight-year-old little boy while doing last minute Christmas shopping on Christmas Eve.While Robert's lifestyle is one of wealth bereft of human connections, Nathan's family has lived very simply, barely making ends meet on his father's salary as a mechanic, yet they have a home that is brimming full of love. His mother, Maggie made it that way, but now she is dying of cancer. I thoroughly admired Maggie's strength and dignity in the face of death. She didn't complain or ask “Why me?”. She chose to live her final days giving as much as she was physically able to her family. Maggie and Jack had a tragic romance to be sure, but one that was filled with more love in the seemingly short time they had together than some couples experience in a lifetime. That love was obviously passed on to their children, especially Nathan who was thoughtful enough to want to give his mother a very special present for her last Christmas with them and in doing so opened the eyes of a man who was lost to help him rediscover his way in life.Death can be a very difficult topic for some people, and even I have to admit to being a former death phobic. I have slowly been challenged in my thinking on the subject, first by the death of both my parents more than ten years ago, and more recently by the death of two beloved pets who, through their final moments, taught me some very important lessons. It may seem strange to some, but I found a certain peace and beauty in these creature's passings and know that I wouldn't have wanted to be anywhere else but helping them to make that transition. I mention these things, because I absolutely loved the way Donna VanLiere handles death in The Christmas Shoes. She treats it not as something to be feared, but as something that can be very beautiful, a mere step into the afterlife. I also greatly admired the way that Maggie and Jack handled the subject of her impending death with Nathan. It is my fervent opinion that in cases like this, kids should be treated intelligently and allowed to make their own decisions, which can lead to a better sense of peace and closure for them.Even though The Christmas Shoes was printed by a mainstream publisher, I have seen the book categorized as Christian fiction, and I suppose in some ways it is. The author is a Christian, and the characters talk about God, heaven, and how Christmas is the celebration of the Christ child's birth. Still, I think that the messages about love, life, death and how the choices we make can affect others, are universal ones that can be appreciated by anyone. In my opinion, the story is never preachy, nor does it seek to advance any sort of religious agenda. It merely tells an inspiring tale, leaving it up to the individual reader to discern the deeper meaning contained within its pages, which to me is the best kind of story, Christian or otherwise. In fact, I lost count of all the characters who were behaving in, what to my way of thinking, was a truly “Christ-like” manner which was very impressive to me. Although several main characters were shining beacons of light too, I was particularly taken by the kindness of some of the secondary characters like Nathan's teacher, Mrs. Patterson, the hospice nurse, Sylvia, and the anonymous lady who merely washed dishes and cleaned the kitchen the day after Maggie's death. They became a humble and sometimes silent expression of the real spirit of Christmas by showing God's love in service to those in need. The Christmas Shoes is the first book in the Christmas Hope series. There are currently five books in the series, and the next one, The Christmas Blessing, follows Nathan as a young man dealing with new challenges in his grown-up life. I may not get a chance to read The Christmas Blessing this holiday season, but I will definitely be reading it at some point in the future. For anyone who isn't aware, The Christmas Shoes is based on the song of the same name recorded by the group NewSong. I've heard it on the radio at Christmastime a few times, and it always makes me cry just like the book did. There was also a made-for-TV movie adapted from the book which aired on television a few years ago and is now available on DVD. While recently shopping, I chanced to find a copy at Target even though I wasn't specifically searching for it, and I am now looking forward to watching it soon. Overall, The Christmas Shoes is an amazing book that made me cry like I don't think any other story ever has, but also left me with some very profound food for thought. Enjoy isn't quite the right word for such a heart-wrenching read, but it was a beautiful and utterly moving experience that has touched my heart and mind in inexplicable ways with its pure and simple expression of the true meaning of the holiday season. I highly recommend this book to all readers. Just be sure to have a box of tissues handy for the inevitable flood of tears.Note: This book has no objectionable content, so in my opinion, would be suitable for teen readers and possibly even pre-teens as long as they wouldn't be bothered by the highly emotional nature of the subject matter.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I fell in love with the song "The Christmas Shoes" by NewSong when I first heard it some years ago now - it always makes me cry! Yet, despite sharing the same title, when I picked up this novel by Donna VanLiere, I had no idea that it was the book that inspired the song.The story follows the journey of two families who are on the brink of collapse. One because the mother is dying and the second due to a workaholic father who puts his family a distant second. Although "The Christmas Shoes lacked the emotional pull that the song has and the writing wasn't the best, it was still a touching read which reminded me of the classic story "The Gift of the Magi" and had me welling up with tears. Overall, this was a gentle story about the importance of family and the true meaning of Christmas.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Several lives intersect in ways no one imagines.Robert thinks providing for his family materially is good enough--to the point where he works such long hours that he's estranged from his family and facing divorce.Nathan's father Jack works as a mechanic but his employers recognize the importance of family. Nathan's mother is dying and after hearing his teacher's story about jeweled shoes, he wants to buy his mother a pair of beautiful shoes. When he doesn't have enough money to pay for them, he turns to the man in line behind him. That man happens to be Robert.I'm still not quite sure why buying that pair of shoes affected Robert in the way it did. Don't get me wrong--I'm glad it did. I'm glad he had time to tell his mother of the change before she too passed away.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    loved this book and movie

Book preview

The Christmas Shoes - Donna VanLiere

Dear Reader,

First and foremost, thank you for downloading this special promotional e-book edition of The Christmas Shoes. When this book released ten years ago I had no idea it would become a movie for CBS Television, that it would be the first in the series of Christmas novels or that I would receive countless e-mails, letters and Facebook comments about how the book touched people’s lives. I am grateful for each of you.

When you’ve finished reading The Christmas Shoes, I hope you’ll take a moment to read a few chapters from my newest book, which you’ll find in the back of this e-book. The Christmas Note is the story of an unlikely friendship between two women, Gretchen Daniels and Melissa McCreary.

Gretchen has recently relocated to a small town with her two children to be closer to her mother, Miriam. After spending years moving around as a soldier’s wife, she’s attempting to build a new life in a new community. A mysterious young woman, Melissa McCreary, lives next door. She has few possessions, little personality, and keeps to herself. Yet the two very different women find themselves embarking on a journey together, uncovering Melissa’s long lost family secrets and ultimately exploring the need for forgiveness, hope, and redemption.

I’m also sharing an exclusive sneak peak at a new project I’m very excited about, The Good Dream, which you won’t see in bookstores until next summer. Until then, you can catch updates from me on Facebook at www.facebook.com/donnavanliere or on my website at www.donnavanliere.com.

Happy Reading and Merry Christmas!

Donna

Also by Donna VanLiere

The Christmas Journey

The Christmas Secret

Finding Grace

The Christmas Promise

The Angels of Morgan Hill

The Christmas Shoes

The Christmas Blessing

The Christmas Hope

For Troy,

who always encourages, always inspires, always believes

God gave us the greatest proof of love that

the world has ever seen.

—Andrew Murray

Contents

Preface

Prologue

Chapter One

Chapter Two

Chapter Three

Chapter Four

Chapter Five

Chapter Six

Chapter Seven

Chapter Eight

Epilogue

Afterword

Acknowledgments

Preview

Preface

Today

Some people go their entire lives missing the small miracles that happen throughout the day—those small blessings God sends from heaven to make us smile, laugh, or to break our hearts, and gently nudge us closer to His side.

I used to miss those tiny miracles: my children’s giggles, their first awkward steps—their little hands wrapped gingerly around my fingers for support. I missed the sense of renewal as one season changed into the next: our dogwoods’ scrawny limbs exploding into magnificent blossoms each spring, and summers when the giant oaks in our backyard dressed themselves in thick foliage, shading our home. I never noticed my wife’s warm glances and easy laugh. I missed the blessing of her love for me.

One night, when joy was far away, God’s grace touched me and opened my eyes. That same grace has inspired me to write this story, to share with you some of the things I have learned, though it’s true, no one could have told me any of this then.

We all have questions in this life. It’s taken me a long time to figure out what the really important questions are, the ones that matter. Not How am I going to make enough money? or What can I do to get promoted? No, more like What are the flowers thinking beneath the snow? When do birds make reservations to fly south? What is God’s plan for my life? What are my wife’s dreams?

A year ago I was finally able to connect all of the pieces. I met a young man who told me how it all happened. Now I know the truth, because now I know how God’s hand guided my life.

Some people, perhaps someone like you, may write off this story as coincidence—a chance encounter, the random crossing of two lives. There was a time, just a few years ago, when I would have said the same. Back then you could not have convinced me that God would use a pair of shoes to change someone’s life. But now I believe.

I most definitely believe.

Prologue

Christmas Day, 2000

That winter, Christmas arrived without snow, which for our town was quite unusual. The fall had been beautiful, sunny and mild. People were in shirtsleeves at Thanksgiving. However, as the holiday season approached, nature turned, bringing, instead of blizzards, some of the worst ice storms of the century, coating everything with ice and knocking down trees and power lines. Then the weather turned bitterly cold, and stayed dark and grim, as everyone waited for the White Christmas Bing Crosby was dreaming of on all the local jukeboxes.

The sedan’s tires spun on the ice, groping for solid ground. I put the car in reverse, backed up, turned the wheels at a different angle, put the car in drive, and attempted the hill into the cemetery a second time. This time the car climbed halfway up, but then the tires began to hum loudly, spinning again. I gave the car more gas but to no avail. Shifting into neutral, I released the clutch and let the car ease backward to the base of the hill, where I parked and turned off the engine.

From where I sat, I could see that the tombstone was covered with a brilliant sheen of ice. Icicles hung off the sides, and brown leaves sat in frozen clusters on the cold stone. I would have to clean it off before I could decorate. I decided to leave everything in the trunk until I cleared the site.

As I got out of the car, the wind shrieked, cutting at my face. I pulled my wool overcoat tightly around me and picked up my gloves from the front seat. Realizing I’d left my hat at home, I pulled up my coat collar as high around my neck as I could and closed the car door behind me. I shivered and began the short climb up the hill.

Walking the hill was not much easier than driving it. I had to place my steps carefully to avoid slipping on the ice. As I entered the park, I could see that most of the pathways that wove throughout the grounds were clear and sparkling. I reached the gravesite I was in the habit of decorating every Christmas. Frost clung to the lettering, shielding the name. I pushed away the leaves and ice, working hard with my gloves, until a ray of sunlight illuminated the date of death: 1985.

It had been fifteen years….

One

December 1985

We did not dare to breathe a prayer,

Or give our anguish scope.

Something was dead within each of us,

And what was dead was Hope.

—Oscar Wilde

The first big snowstorm of the winter of 1985 fell on Thanksgiving. After that, another massive storm seemed to enter the area every few weeks and drop inches, or even a foot, blanketing the landscape and making the town look like a Christmas card, long before the holiday arrived.

Schools were closed more times that winter than in the previous five years combined. Nearly every week, Doris Patterson finalized the lesson plan for her second-grade class, only to have to change it entirely due to yet another snow day.

After twenty-nine years of teaching, Doris was accustomed to the unexpected. Where some saw chaos, she saw opportunity. When the principal announced an early dismissal over the PA system, Doris tried to think up a fun, new assignment for her students, to accompany the traditional spelling and math homework. Assignments like What are the flowers thinking beneath the snow? or When do birds make reservations to fly south? Though simple assignments, she’d seen them stir her students’ imaginations, creating wonderful memories for her scrapbook.

In the last couple of years, Doris had considered retiring but, for whatever reason, had always felt she wasn’t ready. Until now. She’d recently informed the principal that this would be her last school year. Her husband had retired four years earlier from the post office. He was anxious to hit the wide-open roads with her in a brand-new RV he’d purchased, with Herb and Doris airbrushed in blue and pink on the spare-tire cover. Maybe it was all the snow there had been that year, but warm winters in the Southwest had begun to sound good to her.

Doris never showed favoritism outwardly, but every year there was one child in her classroom who captured her heart. In 1985 that child was Nathan Andrews. Nathan was quiet and introspective. He had sandy hair, huge blue eyes, and a shy smile. Doris noticed that his gentle nature was lacking the spark she’d seen in his previous two years at the school. While other students interrupted her with Um, Mrs. Patterson, Charity just sneezed on my head or Hey, Mrs. Patterson, Jacob just hit me with a spitball, Nathan made his way to her desk without calling attention to himself and whispered, Excuse me, Mrs. Patterson. He’d then wait patiently until she turned to him. Compared with the boisterous natures of the twenty-five other eight-year-olds in her class, Nathan’s measured, serious disposition was, almost in a sad way, beyond his years.

Some of her colleagues maintained that children from poorer homes were harder to teach, had more disciplinary problems, and were generally mouthier than those students who came from middle- to upper-class homes. Doris disagreed. She knew Nathan’s family could be considered lower income. Mr. Andrews worked at a local auto-repair shop and, people said, could barely make ends meet. Yet in all her years of teaching, Nathan was one of the most polite children she’d ever met. Doris had learned that it wasn’t the size or cost of a home that created kind, well-adjusted children, but the love and attention that filled that home.

Nathan’s mother had often volunteered at the school in the early fall. She had helped out in Doris’s classroom, cutting out shapes and numbers for a math lesson, sounding out words for a student struggling with phonics, or stapling paper flowers and trees on the bulletin board. Nathan would beam with pride at the sight of his mother. But Doris hadn’t seen Maggie Andrews in many weeks.

One day her husband, Jack, had come to school to tell Doris that his wife was seriously ill. Maggie Andrews had cancer, and the prognosis wasn’t good. No wonder Nathan often seemed distracted. He was not old enough to fully understand the situation and probably didn’t know that his mother was dying. But some days Doris could see it in the boy’s eyes, a terrible sadness she recognized.

Her own mother had died of cancer when Doris was only twenty, and that single event had indelibly changed her. Her heart broke for the little boy as she watched him erase a hole into his paper, smoothing the tear with the back of his small hand as he continued with his work. She’d never had a student in her class who had lost a parent, and she found herself at a loss for words or actions. Somehow the gentle hug or extra playtime she’d given over the years to children who had lost a precious pet or extended family member seemed inadequate, even inappropriate. She still remembered that after her mother’s death, she had wished that people would say nothing at all, rather than the trite, though well-meaning words they’d offered in sympathy. Sometimes being quiet is the greatest gift you can give someone, Doris thought, as she watched the boy sharpen his pencil, something terribly heartbreaking in the way he struggled to turn the handle. She whispered a silent prayer for God to draw near and wrap the little boy in His arms.

I slammed the phone down in my office. For the umpteenth time, I had tried to make a call, only to hear a busy signal in my ear. The day was short on hours, and I was feeling even shorter on patience.

Would somebody tell me how these new phones are supposed to work? I shouted out my office door to my secretary.

Gwen Sturdivant, my assistant for the past ten years, hurried in to help me.

First, make sure you select a line that isn’t lit up, she explained.

I know that, Gwen, I said, exasperated. I’m thirty-eight years old. I’m familiar with the general uses of a telephone. I want to know why I hear that stupid busy signal every time I make a call.

"Once you dial, you need to wait for the tone and

Enjoying the preview?
Page 1 of 1