DramaDramaDrama! Lots of sex and craziness.
In the opening lines of Santa Steps Out: A Fairy Tale for Grown-ups, we learn that God the Father had to "cut His vacation short" and is in a "towering rage" about it. It appears that while the archangel Michael was running things, the world got pretty screwed up. "Michael...you know that Santa Claus and the Tooth Fairy are never to cross paths. It's one of our Father's most solemn injunctions." Ah, that Tooth Fairy. She's also got her hooks into the Easter Bunny.
Robert Devereaux is a master of vivid scene setting, especially gory scenes and sex scenes. There is a lot of sex in this book. Prepare for a strange and stimulating ride when you hop in the sleigh with Santa and witness all his adventures. Prepare to see childhood figures--figures known principally for delivering gifts in the night--in a whole new light. Devereaux is exuberantly polytheistic and well-grounded in Greek mythology, so you'll be entertained by some notions about where all these immortals may have come from in the first place.
You know, he lost me early on, at the part where the Tooth Fairy animates a corpse to have sex with it and voraciously eats it during the act, and then poops out quarters. (I'd use the word he uses in the book, but I'm not sure of the PBS rules about that.) He tells you in authors notes at the first of the book AND the ones at the end that this is all hysterically funny and folks who don't find it so are somehow flawed. I shall take it as read that the flaw is in me, but somehow, I am not a hundred percent sure about that.