The Jolly Days of Reading
a special Hop with the clients of literary agent Linda S. Glaz, of Hartline Literary
December 7, the Day After St. Nick's...
I belong to two local book clubs because I need to keep my reading habits expanded beyond me...like, if given a choice, I'd probably just eat chocolate chip pancakes for the rest of my life (although there are a lot of things one can do with a pancake....) and need to read some classics and non-fiction instead of a steady diet of fiction that includes dragons.
So, in the month of December in each club we're reading a different holiday book.
Fannie Flagg's Redbird Christmas, and
Eowyn Ivey's The Snow Child
I loved the Russian fable of the snow child, so I was excited to read The Snow Child, a story about Alaskan homesteaders in the 1920s who couldn't have children of their own, thier dreams and play, and the little girl, Faina, who shows up on their doorstep. It's new, published 2012 by Little, Brown, and Co.
And honestly, after I read it, this book is my favorite of the year. I read quite a lot...so that tells ya something. I don't generall recommend books, either: BUT I HIGHLY RECOMMEND THIS ONE.
Fannie Flagg has a different take on life, for sure...but we had a good discussion about her story, published 2004, about Oswald T. Campbell who leaves Chicago one winter after getting a stunning diagnosis, to head south to Lost River for what he believes will be his last Christmas. The book was sort of cute, probably set during the fifties, had nothing to do with Christmas and was rather two-dimensional. I liked it okay, don't get me wrong. It was okay to sit down and have someone tell me a story. There were not layers nor enchantment. It was just a little story.
Other favorites of mine include Charles Dickens's classic A Christmas Carol. I love all the different interpretations of it over the years on television and in the theater.
O Henry's Gift of the Magi is another one - irony, fable, warning...we're treating ourselves to a live performance of the play this year for our Christmas gift, to American Players Theater in Spring Green, Wisconsin.
And finally, besides, of course, Luke's version of the birth in a stable, I think often of the Hans Christian Andersen tale, The Little Match Girl. I remember being absolutely horrified and weeping when I first read it as a little girl, and my mother having to comfort me, but now, I think of it fondly as a lesson in reality and comfort in knowing what comes after this life.
Enjoy a couple of chapters from The Map Quilt
Map Quilt 2 chapters
Merry Christmas!
Two of my books are on sale for the season for $2.99 each
And my co-conspirator on A Summer in Oakville has a very, very sweet Christmas novella for .99:
Grudges Not Included
Visit these sites to learn about other favorites!
6 - Linda Glaz - http://lindaglaz.blogspot.com
7 - Lisa – http://livingourfaithoutloud.blogspot.com
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9 - Susan Craft – http://historicalfictionalightintime.blogspot.com
http://historicalfictionalightintime.blogspot.com
http://historicalfictionalightintime.blogspot.com
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15 - Karla Akins http://envisionpublishing.tumblr.com
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1719 - Patty Wysong --http://www.pattywysong.com
19 - Davalynn
Spencer – http://www.davalynnspencer.blogspot.com
http://www.davalynnspencer.blogspot.com
20 - Tamara Lynn Kraft - www.tamaralynnkraft.comhttp://www.davalynnspencer.blogspot.com