Mostly fun stories written by a good group of mystery writers for this book specifically. Only four stories, to my knowledge, were picked up for reprinting in other anthologies since they appeared here first in 1993: Dick Lochte's "Mad Dog," Ron Goulart's "A Visit from St. Nicholas," Jan Grape's "The Man in the Red Flannel Suit," and Margaret Maron's "That Bells My Ring and Whistles Safely Blow." The Grape and Maron stories were picked up for The Year's 25 Finest Crime and Mystery Stories, Third Annual Edition in 1994. The other two appeared in Otto Penzler's Big Book of Christmas Mysteries.
Actually, in a paperback anthology of 19 limited subject matter original stories, getting two into a Best of Year anthology and two into a later anthology is really rather good.
These stories all involve not just Christmas, but actual appearances of a Santa Claus of one sort or another. Only one is about the REAL Santa.
If you're looking for good Christmas stories, these aren't bad
Actually, in a paperback anthology of 19 limited subject matter original stories, getting two into a Best of Year anthology and two into a later anthology is really rather good.
These stories all involve not just Christmas, but actual appearances of a Santa Claus of one sort or another. Only one is about the REAL Santa.
If you're looking for good Christmas stories, these aren't bad
From Amazon.com: Although there are some worthwhile surprises among the 19 original mystery stories in this collection, it is not much of a tribute to the big man in red. Billie Sue Mosiman's account of a puzzling death on a shrimp boat and how it is revenged isn't even a Christmas story, despite a cameo appearance by a fund-raiser in a Santa suit. An opening teaser robs the suspense from Ron Goulart's yarn about an unemployed artist who makes his first--and last--foray into crime when he tries to burgle his ex-wife's house. The more successful stories tend to run on the dark side. Matthew J. Costello portrays an underemployed magician who picks up some extra work doing "the Santa gig" for parties until he is lured to a job where the only guest is a corpse. On Christmas Eve, Peter Crowther's PI Koko Tate puts his English degree to work to help police track a serial killer who smothers poor, elderly women and leaves a snippet of poetry at each crime scene. Richard T. Chizmar and Norman Partridge join forces to describe the action a department store security guard takes when his Santa costume prompts a sexually abused little girl to confide that she wants a new daddy for Christmas. Greenberg and Waugh edited, respectively, Mummy Stories and Murder & Mystery in Chicago.