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No storybook ending for Life Savers fans this Christmas

Each Christmas for the past four decades, Mel Campbell has stuffed his family’s stockings with Life Savers Sweet Storybooks. Now its parent company has discontinued the holiday favourite in Canada, leaving a sour taste in the mouths of many. 

Ottawa man’s 40-year tradition in peril as candy maker discontinues holiday treat.

Two boxes of Life Savers candy with Christmas designs.

Each Christmas for the past four decades, Mel Campbell, 71, has bought the Life Savers Sweet Storybook for his daughters’ stockings. When his three grandchildren were born, he started doing it for them too.

Now, for the first time in all those years, Campbell hasn’t been able to find the rolls of hard candy packaged in a little cardboard book — in recent years sold in Canada under the name “Fun Books” — and he’s worried it will mark the end of a longstanding holiday tradition.

“This year for the first time, it’s been very difficult to find them,” he said. “Past years, I’ve even been able to find them after Christmas.”

Campbell’s search for the hard, ring-shaped candy has taken him and his daughters to more than a dozen stores, but they’ve come up dry.

“We can’t find them anywhere,” said daughter Melinda Campbell, 44, who even posted on Facebook about it, hoping someone had eyes on the beloved holiday treat.

Text from a Facebook post

The Campbells aren’t imagining things.

“We discontinued the Life Saver Fun Books in 2023,” confirmed Tarm Nersesian, director of external communications and affairs for Mars Canada. The Life Savers Sweet Storybook has been discontinued in Canada but it is still available in the United States.

In recent years, there’s been some grumbling among candy fans over the size of the books, and there’s even an online petition decrying the dwindling number of rolls in each book from 12 to 10, then eight and now six.

“The original, now a collectors item it seems, had 12 Life Savers rolls in them, and a variety of flavors: Pep-o-mint, Spear-o-mint, Butterscotch, Orange, Lemon, Wild Cherry, Wint-o-green, Clove, Stik-o-Pep, Butter Rum, Crist-o-mint, and Five Flavor,” reads the petition.

An vintage ad from featuring Life Savers

“When I first started the books, you would get 12 rolls of Life Savers,” said Mel Campbell, who still works full time as a shipper-receiver for a small local machine shop.

“But over the years, you know with shrinkflation, it went down to 10 rolls in books, now for quite a few years it’s down to six rolls.”

A quick Google search reveals you can still purchase the Life Savers Sweet Storybook online, but at a steep price. “They’re $49 for two. As much as I’m tempted to do it, that would be crazy,” Campbell said.

There’s just something about keeping a “corny” tradition alive, though.

“I always put them at the bottom of their stocking. It was always the last thing that they pulled out and even now, as old as my daughters are and as old as my grandchildren are, I still get a kick when they get to the bottom of their stocking and they pull out that Life Savers book and I can still see a smile come across their face,” a choked-up Campbell said over the phone.

A man wearing a Santa hat holds a bag of LifeSavers

“It used to be a big thing with my sister and I after we opened our gifts, we’d sit and open our Life Saver books,” Melinda Campbell said. “We would trade and barter for the kind that we liked.”

She liked butterscotch and spearmint, but her sister hated the mint ones, she recalled.

According to Mars Canada, the candy company now puts M&M’s in their Fun Books.

“To continue this long-standing family tradition, we’d be happy to provide the M&M Fun Book in both peanut and milk chocolate,” Nersesian offered.

Two girls sit on Santa's lap in a vintage photo

Mel Campbell’s not interested — and he’s upset the holiday treats were discontinued without warning.

“I’m just so disappointed,” he said. “I know other people must be looking for them as well.”

So what’s everyone getting instead this year?

“Between you and me, I’m going to probably just buy a bunch of Life Saver rolls and throw them in the bottom of their stockings. I’m still looking but not having any luck,” Campbell said.

Ottawa Morning: Life Savers pulls plug on Sweet Storybook, ending 40 year Christmas tradition for an Ottawa man 

For four decades, Mel Campbell has bought the Life Savers Sweet Storybook for his daughters at Christmas. Now, he does the same for his three grandchildren. But this year, for the first time, Campbell hasn’t been able to find the rolls of hard candy packaged in a little book and he’s worried it will mark the end of a longstanding holiday tradition.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Rebecca Zandbergen is from Ottawa and has worked for CBC Radio across the country for more than 20 years, including stops in Iqaluit, Halifax, Windsor and Kelowna. Most recently she hosted the morning show at CBC London. Contact Rebecca at rebecca.zandbergen@cbc.ca or follow @rebeccazandberg on Twitter.

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Credit belongs to : www.cbc.ca

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