We are expecting a wintery mix here in Maryland, rain, sleet, ice and snow all mixing together to create an equal mixture of beauty and angst. Trees with limbs that glisten like diamonds to go along with downed power lines and people lost in the cold. Joy mixed in with a little quiet reflection, softened by the grey skies of winter and clouds laden with snow.
Days like this bring back memories of winters past and winter stories I loved reading to my daughter and the children later at the nature center. Stories like The Winter Bear by Ruth Craft and Robert Frost’s Stopping Through The Woods On A Snowy Evening were a perfect way to convey the feelings and emotions brought on by the first snow or a cold, blustery day in winter.
The Winter Bear especially is still so close to my heart. It’s simple story and the illustrations that hark back to the style of the original Winnie the Pooh never fail to move me. A lost stuff bear is tangled up in a shrub looking worn , a little dirty and so very alone. Its winter and the landscape is cold and barren. Then a small group of children, siblings, finds the bear, gets him down and takes him home where they clean him up, dress in warmly and give that little bear a home with them. It’s a spare, elegant and concise little story and yet it is so moving that it can still bring tears to my eyes as that last page as the children and little bear are snug and warm in a little living room with the fire blazing and snow falling outside. It was first published in 1976 and is hard to find. But once found and added to your bookshelf, it will become a family treasure to bring out generation after generation no matter your religion or location. Much like the other book that I love so well, Robert Frost’s Stopping Through the Woods on a Snowy Evening. The illustrations are in black and white, with a splash of red in places, just glorious and perfect for this poem. Children and adults alike love looking at them, watching the sleigh travel through town and into the woods with a surprise for the animals that live there. And then there are those words….such memorable, wonderful words. The last stanza is the best known..”.The woods are lovely, dark, and deep,But I have promises to keep,And miles to go before I sleep,And miles to go before I sleep.” I have the entire short poem at the end of the post today. But those words and those illustrations together paint a memory portrait that draws adults and children into those woods time and again, a magic that is never lost. Pick those books up and add them to your holiday collection.
Now I have a very special week ahead starting with a book that made my Best of 2013 within the first ten pages. That’s when I started sobbing copious tears, a phrase perfect for the floodgate that opened upon reading Amy Lane’s latest book, Christmas Kitsch. Never have I been so moved by a character that quickly had me forgetting he wasn’t real. Rusty, a wounded, glorious man child, whose open heart and mind is so transcendent that his story pulled me in not to release me until 3am, red eyed, snotty, and happy beyond belief that I had met him. Amy Lane is running a contest and her author spotlight is Monday with my review of Christmas Kitsch is on Tuesday. Thursday is a 4 book, 4 author Boys In the Band Blog Tour (and contest). And Friday and Saturday…well if you have been reading the Pulp Friction authors and their combined series (City Knight, Triple Threat, Wicked’s Ways and Chances Are) then you are in for another treat. The last book in all their series is a combined effort. Odd Man Out wraps up all the stories of all the characters and is written by all 4 authors. They have written a guest blog for Friday to talk about the last book and what’s coming in 2014 for Pulp Friction. My review of Odd Man Out follows on Saturday. And there is an amazing giveaway associated with this Pulp Friction Season Finale as well. What a week ahead!!!! Don’t miss out on a day of it!
Monday, Dec. 9: Amy Lane’s Christmas Kitsch Blog Tour, Contest and Author Spotlight
Tuesday, Dec. 10: Christmas Kitsch by Amy Lane
Wed., Dec. 11: Tag Team: Fais Do Do by BA Tortuga
Thurs., Dec. 12: Boys In The Band Blog Tour and Contest, Authors L.A. Witt, Paula Coots, Rowan Speedwell, and Cecilia Tan
Friday, Dec. 13: Pulp Friction Author Blog, Contest and Odd Man Out release
Sat., Dec. 14: Odd Man Out by Lee Brazil, Havan Fellows, TE Webb, and Laura Harner, a Pulp Friction 2013 finale!
Robert Frost’s Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening
Whose woods these are I think I know.
His house is in the village, though;
He will not see me stopping here
To watch his woods fill up with snow.
My little horse must think it queer
To stop without a farmhouse near
Between the woods and frozen lake
The darkest evening of the year.
He gives his harness bells a shake
To ask if there is some mistake.
The only other sound’s the sweep
Of easy wind and downy flake.
The woods are lovely, dark, and deep,
But I have promises to keep,
And miles to go before I sleep,
And miles to go before I sleep.