The Elf on the Shelf: A Christmas Tradition (ISBN-13: 978-0-9769907-9-6) is a children’s picture book written by American mother and daughter Carol Aebersold and Chanda Bell, and illustrated by Coë Steinwart. The book was self-published in 2005 by CCA and B Publishing in Marietta, GA. The Elf on the Shelf comes in a keepsake box that features the hardbound book and a small pixie scout elf. Written in rhyme with accompanying watercolor illustrations, it is a Christmas tale of how Santa knows who is naughty and nice. The described tradition of The Elf on the Shelf usually begins around Thanksgiving and lasts until Christmas Eve, when the elves return to the North Pole until the next holiday season. The book spent time as the number one best-seller at Barnes and Noble's website.[1]
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Every day from Thanksgiving until Christmas Eve, each family's scout elf watches over the children and then at night, once everyone goes to bed, the elf flies back to the North Pole to report back to Santa about what activities, good and bad, took place throughout the day. Before the family wakes up each morning, the scout elf flies back from the North Pole and hides. By hiding in a new spot each morning around the house, the scout elf and the family play an on-going game of hide and seek. The Elf on the Shelf explains that elves get their magic by being named. In the back of each book, families have an opportunity to write their elf's name and the date that they adopted it. Once the elf is named, the scout elf receives its special Christmas magic which allows it to fly to and from the North Pole. However, the magic might go if touched, so the rule for The Elf on the Shelf states: "There's only one rule that you have to follow so I will come back and be here tomorrow: Please do not touch me. My magic might go, and Santa won't hear all I've seen or I know." Although families aren't supposed to touch their scout elf, they can talk to it and tell it all their Christmas wishes so it can report back to Santa accurately.
In response to numerous rejections from major publishing houses, Aebersold and Bell ultimately self-published The Elf on the Shelf; along with Bell's twin sister Christa Pitts, they created their own publishing company under the name of CCA and B ("Creatively Classic Activities and Books"). After initially publishing 300 copies of The Elf on the Shelf, they had sold over 1.5 million copies by the end of 2010.[2]
Some parents feel that the use of "The Elf on the Shelf" to spy on children smacks of McCarthyism, and choose alternative methods of encouraging their children to behave. [3]
The story has been adapted into a digitally animated television special entitled An Elf's Story: The Elf on the Shelf. It was first telecast by CBS on November 26, 2011. [4]
An Elf's Story: The Elf on the Shelf follows Germanic and Scandinavian traditions that have included elves as part of the holiday season.[5] In Danish tradition, for example, children are often told that the "nisser" are watching them, in the expectation that it will encourage good behavior prior to Christmas.[6]
The story was included in an episode of the television sitcom The League entitled "Kegel the Elf" that was first telecast by FX on December 9, 2010 on in which the character Ellie names her own Elf on the Shelf "Kegel". [7]