Friday, December 6, 2024

Santa and the Lumberjacks -- a somewhat tall tale

 

 

Since the holiday season is coming, I thought it would be fun to revisit those long ago holidays when gifts and food and holiday decorations were hand made. I still try to create handmade gifts for my children and grandchildren – everything from games and storybooks to body pillows and quilts. At one time, I would write short stories and incorporate them into the Christmas cards I sent to family and friends. As my holiday gift to you, here is one of those stories. Enjoy and happy holidays.

SANTA AND THE LUMBERJACKS

A Somewhat Tall Tale 

            A very long, long time ago, before video games and 4-wheelers and even before television, families made each other gifts for Christmas out of what was available to them. Mothers would make patchwork quilts to keep the children warm at night, and fathers would carve animals and toy tops out of small chunks of wood. Children would take scraps of paper and make paper chains to hang around the house to give it a festive air. On Christmas morning, Santa would leave each child a peppermint stick and perhaps, if they were very good, an orange in their stocking.

            But then one year, word reached Santa that a late frost hit the orange orchards, destroying the blossoms and there would be no oranges. Santa didn’t know what he would do for the children he visited. As he walked home through the woods where he lived, he came across a group of lumberjacks, sitting by the side of the road in tears.

            Now Santa was a big, jolly man, but lumberjacks were an even heartier group, and Santa had often seen them felling trees with a single blow of an ax. The men were large enough that it only took one of them to hoist a tree onto a wagon, or toss it into the river to float downstream. So you can understand that seeing these huge men sniffling and wailing was a trifle upsetting for Santa.

            “What is wrong?” he asked the first man.

            “The forest has been sold; the mill shut down,” the man said. He jerked a hanky out of his pocket that was larger than a blanket and it landed on Santa, covering him from head to foot. As the lumberjack dabbed at his eyes with one corner, Santa struggled out from under the blue fleece.

            “What are we to do?” shouted another, stirring up such a wind it knocked Santa down and blew his hat right off his head where it landed in the snow.

            Santa was almost afraid to ask another question.

            “Are all of you lumberjacks? Can’t you find other work?”

            “I am the cook for the lumber company,” answered a man with a strange looking metal pot on his head where a cap would normally be. He held several spoons in one huge hand, and a mixing bowl in the other that was gigantic enough for Santa to use as a bathtub. Before Santa could say a word, yet another piped up.

            “And I am Patch, for I mend the clothes and tend the cuts for all the men who fell the trees.” Santa could certainly see how the man got his name, for his clothes were a patchwork of colors and patterns, and scraps of material stuck out of each and every one of his pockets.

            “Well, come along with me, and I will take you home where Mrs. Claus will feed you some supper.” Santa had a generous heart, and though he didn’t know how to find oranges for the children’s Christmas this year, he did know that Mrs. Claus would welcome these men into their home.

            Mrs. Claus had just baked bread and when she offered some to the hungry men, one lumberjack popped a whole loaf into his mouth as though it were a gumdrop. Her eyes widened and she hurriedly chopped another bushel of vegetables into the stew she was making. When it was ready, she scooped hearty portions into her biggest pots for the hungry lumberjacks, happy she had enough to feed them. But then they sat down on her chairs and the legs broke under each and every one of the huge men.

            Not wanting to be impolite, Mrs. Claus smiled and asked them very nicely, “Would you mind standing up to eat?”

            She then turned to Santa and whispered, “They can not stay here, for the beds are too small and by morning we would not have a lick of furniture left.”

            Santa said the lumberjacks could stay in the barn, but when they tried to go inside, only two of them would fit, and only after they had knocked out the stalls for the mules.

            “I will stay in the milk house,” Patch said, laying large boards on top of the milk cans to make a bed.

            “I will sleep in the tool shed,” said Cook, opening the door. Before Santa could say a word, he began throwing hoes and shovels, trowels and rakes out into the snow. Even empty, the shed was not large, and as Santa walked back to the house, he saw that Cook’s feet stuck out of the doorway. He would have to ask Mrs. Claus for an extra blanket.

* * *

            Santa woke up in the morning to an incredible amount of racket. It was usually very quiet in the woods where he and Mrs. Claus lived, and he couldn’t figure out what would make so much pounding, sawing, hammering and whirring noise.

            When he went outside to see, he found the lumberjacks all at work. They had cut down trees (only the dead ones as they were environmentally friendly), shaved off the bark and were whittling dolls and hobbyhorses, toy trains and soldiers. Patch was sewing little clothes for the dolls, and Cook had taken apart a mop and was using the string to make manes for the hobbyhorses.

            One of the lumberjacks, the tallest and widest of them all, blushed as he explained the noise to Santa. “You were so kind to give us food and a place to sleep. We heard you tell Mrs. Claus there would be no oranges for the children this year, so we decided to make them toys instead.”

            “Why that is very nice of you,” Santa replied, “but you have made so many.” He looked around the barn, where dolls and toy soldiers sat in neat rows all along the hayloft. The hobbyhorses were lined up along one wall, their faces comical as one lumberjack painted on eyes and smiles. Though the lumberjacks were very large and two of them barely fit in the barn, they had made all the toys just the right size for children.

            “Ouch,” Patch cried when he forgot and stood up straight, his head poking a hole right through the roof.

            “I think we are going to have to build a bigger workshop,” Santa stated. “One where you will not have to walk on your knees or sleep with your feet sticking out the door.”

            Not only did the lumberjacks make toys and trains and hobby horses, they quickly built Santa a huge building tall enough so all four could work inside and no one banged their head on the roof. And thus began Santa’s Workshop.

* * *

            Christmas Eve came with a new layer of snow all over everything to make the landscape white and glittering.

            “I’ve made you a new coat to keep you warm,” Mrs. Claus said, holding it up for Santa. “But Patch used all my material, and even cut up the blanket for the toy soldiers’ coats, and so I had only this red fur to use.”

            Of course, Santa wasn’t about to tell Mrs. Claus that he didn’t look good in red, so he allowed her to help him into the coat, buckling a wide black belt around his middle to keep it closed.

            The lumberjacks put all the toys into gigantic bags and loaded them onto Santa’s wagon. Then they hitched the mules to the harness. They stood beside Mrs. Claus and waved, their huge hands causing the new snow to flurry about so much they couldn’t see Santa as he drove out of sight.

Mrs. Clause only hoped he would not drive the mules right off the road, for not only was there no light to brighten the way, but Bessie, one of the mules, was blind in one eye and really shouldn’t be out late at night. Thankfully, Santa only went to the neighboring villages and farms, always getting home before dawn.

* * *

            Sleepy and tired from his night on the road, Santa unhitched the mules and put them to bed in the barn. He dragged his bag of leftover toys behind him as he walked to the house, hoping Mrs. Claus would have a hot breakfast waiting for him.

            When he opened the door, it was to find Mrs. Claus crying, her apron full of tears and the floor awash with puddles.

            “What has happened?” he asked, dropping his bag into the corner.

            “They reopened the mill so the lumberjacks have left!” she wailed.

“But you didn’t care for the fact they broke your chairs and cut up your blankets and that Patch put a hole in the roof of the barn with his head.”

            “I know, and they ruined the tools when they tossed them out into the snow,” she added to the list of grievances against the lumberjacks.

            “Then why are you crying now that they have gone?” Santa shook his head.

            “How will we make toys for the children next year?”

            “Well, perhaps I will have to get apples if the orange trees fail again,” Santa said with a sigh.

            “We can help.”

Santa thought Mrs. Claus had spoken, though the words were much higher than her sweet voice. “I know you will, dear,” he replied, patting her on the shoulder.

            “I didn’t say anything. I thought you had spoken,” she told him.

            “Let us out. We want to help.” A thumping sound came from the corner, and when Santa turned, he saw his bag wiggling and bumping all over the floor.

            “What on earth?” Mrs. Claus asked.

            “The lumberjacks made so many dolls and soldiers, I had some left over,” Santa replied as he carefully approached the squirming, jumping bag. He pulled the tie that kept it closed. Out tumbled the dolls in their patchwork dresses and the soldiers in their blanket uniforms, all talking at once.

            “We should make more trains and bicycles to ride on.”

“And doll houses to live in.”

“And games to play like checkers and dominoes.”

Santa and Mrs. Claus were so surprised, they fell into the only two chairs not broken by the lumberjacks. The small dolls and soldiers, so very different from the huge lumbering men who had been there just the night before, laughed and chattered happily.

“Well, we won’t have to worry about anyone putting a hole in the roof with their head, now will we?” Mrs. Claus asked.

“And even though there are many more of them, I don’t suppose they will eat as much as the lumberjacks, will they?” Santa said as he watched the dolls and soldiers merrily dance around the room, still talking excitedly about all the toys they wanted to make.

“If you make so many trains and bikes and games and doll houses, how will I ever get them all delivered?” Santa asked. “I went as far and wide as I could with my wagon and mules, and still, I had all of you left over.”

The dolls looked at the soldiers, and they all giggled.

“I think we had better go outside for this,” said one soldier with red painted cheeks and a button nose.

The soldiers dragged Santa’s bag out into the yard. The dolls grabbed Santa and Mrs. Claus by the hands and pulled and pushed them out onto the porch. It was just before dawn and the glint of new fallen snow made everything glitter and twinkle like a fairyland.

“Hurry, before it’s too late,” one of the dolls said. “The magic is almost over.”

As Santa watched, two soldiers held the bag open and another went inside. He could hear whispers and neighs and all kinds of noise as the bag jumped around and looked like it was alive.

“Here they come!” a muffled voice hollered from deep inside the bag.

The head of one hobbyhorse poked out of the bag, followed by another and another. Where once they had only a stick for a body, now they had four legs. As they emerged and stood wobbling in the snow, they grew and grew and sprouted beautiful antlers on their heads.

“Why, you’re reindeer!” Santa exclaimed.

One of the reindeer, whose nose was painted bright red, nodded, the bells on his antlers jingling merrily.

“We can fly, too,” said one. “We’ll make sure you’re on time to each and every child’s house on Christmas Eve, delivering all the toys made by your…” The reindeer looked curiously at the toys.

“We’re dolls.”

“We’re soldiers.”

“Hmm, we can’t keep calling you that,” Santa said. “Let’s see. There are eleven of you.”

“Elvens,” repeated one of the baby dolls who was just learning to talk.

“That’s it!” Santa exclaimed, his belly shaking with his laughter. “We’ll call you elves!”

So the story is told that thanks to the huge and hearty lumberjacks, Santa now has a workshop and a merry group of elves to help him make toys every year. And with the speed of the magical reindeer, Santa has time to deliver all those toys to good girls and boys all over the world.

If you love holiday stories, I invite you to visit my page at Books We Love at https://bwlpublishing.ca/baldwin-barbara/ where I have three of them waiting for your reading pleasure. “If Wishes Were Magic”, “Always Believe” and “Snowflakes and Kisses” are all available in both ebook and print.


Barbara Baldwin

www.authorsden.com/barbarajbaldwin

www.amazon.com/author/barbarabaldwin


Thursday, December 5, 2024

Dancing Mary: A Tale of Jealousy, Ghosts, and the Unforgiving Wilderness

 

For Jay Lang Books click the link


Dancing Mary: A Tale of Jealousy, Ghosts, and the Unforgiving Wilderness

As I sit at my desk, the Winter wind pushing against the window, I find myself deep in the world I’m creating—a world that blends the harsh cold of British Columbia’s wilderness with the supernatural. I’m currently penning my novel, Dancing Mary, for the Canadian Mystery Paranormal series, and the story’s roots run deep into the foggy history of Vancouver Island.

It all began when I stumbled across an obscure account in the historical papers of BC. The year was the mid-1800s, and the first European settlers had just made their way to Comox, a place as harsh and unforgiving as it was beautiful. These settlers arrived in a land that was foreign, cold, and wild. Armed only with hand tools, they began to carve out their existence, using the massive trees that surrounded them to build rudimentary camps against the elements.

But as often happens in stories of the past, it's the people who shape the course of history, and in this case, one particular settler, Lawrence Cummings, would forever change the fate of those who called this land home.

Cummings, a man of ill repute with a notorious temper, crossed paths with a beautiful Native girl who caught the attention of many of the settlers. Her name was Mary, and her beauty was as captivating as it was dangerous, drawing the gaze of men in a place where nothing came easily.

The settlers whispered, and the jealousy of Lawrence Cummings simmered beneath the surface. It wasn’t long before his emotions boiled over in a fit of rage. One fateful night, under the dim light of a flickering candle, Lawrence took the life of the girl who had captivated so many hearts. In his jealousy, he silenced her forever, but in doing so, he ignited something darker and far more sinister than he could have ever anticipated.

Now, Dancing Mary isn’t just a story about tragic love. It’s a journey into the eerie unknown, where the boundaries between the living and the dead are paper-thin. Because, you see, some souls don’t rest easily. Mary’s spirit, broken by the injustice of her untimely death, lingers in the cold, dark corners of the forest where she once danced. The settlers who lived to tell the tale spoke of her ghost—dancing in the moonlight, her presence as haunting as the winds that whip through the trees.

As I write, I can feel the weight of the past pressing down. The rawness of the land, the bitterness of betrayal, and the eerie whispers of a ghost whose memory refuses to fade are all coming together to create something that will leave readers with a sense of unease and fascination.

So, stay tuned. If you enjoy tales where the past and the supernatural collide in a dance of mystery, you won’t want to miss Dancing Mary. It's a story born from history, steeped in the paranormal, and wrapped in suspense. I can’t wait to share this dark, chilling journey with you all.

😊 Jay 

jaylang.ca

Introducing Musician Scot Little Bihlman

 


https://bookswelove.net/bihlman-scot-little/

Hey everyone! I’m Scot Little Bihlman, an Emmy Award-winning musician who’s had the honor of working with legends like John Fogerty, Jelly Roll, and Buddy Guy, just to name a few. Right now, I have three songs featured on the hit Amazon Prime series Cross. I’m also excited to announce that I’m writing a memoir, set to be released by Books We Love in 2025. It will tell the story of my journey through the music industry—what it’s like to survive in this tough business, and the incredible people I’ve crossed paths with along the way. Recently, I landed an exciting acting opportunity in the upcoming Spider-Man Noir show, starring Nicolas Cage, set to release in 2026. How’s everyone doing out there? Feel free to reach out to me on Instagram or visit my website. Hope everyone is enjoying the holiday season!

 

Www.Scotbihlman.com

IG- Scotbihlman

 

Wednesday, December 4, 2024

Sneak Peak: Echoes of the Nokota by Julie Christen

 

Author’s Note

This book is a memoir. It reflects the authors’ present recollections of experiences. As time passes, memories are echoes of events. Some names and characteristics have been changed to protect privacy, some events have been compressed, and some dialogue has been recreated; however, the tone and emotions experienced remain true.

Nokota® is a trademark breed name developed by Frank and Leo Kuntz and the Nokota Conservancy in Linton, ND.

 ***

This is a success story. It may not seem like it at times, but I assure you, it is.

This is Frank Kuntz’s story. It is about how he and his family came to save the native horse – the Nokota®. It is my way of putting together a comprehensive collection of his memories and the events that led him to become the unsung hero he is today.

I have done my best to share both his story and the horses’ story in a way that helps people learn, understand, and empathize. What might look to one as a life of sacrifice and strife is, in truth, a story of love and faithfulness. It is about allowing passion to drive your choices in life.

Since I am, indeed, not Frank, I have taken some creative license (with Frank’s blessing) to fill in some gaps and bring his story to life. I have written in such a way that will allow you to walk next to him as you discover the man and the horses I have so dearly admired for over twenty years. Please allow a little grace and creative latitude should you encounter some muddy gaps or misaligned details. Know that, whether it be for loss of memory over the decades, purposeful omission due to emotional pain, or ensuring certain individuals are not painted in a negative light, the story runs true to that which I have learned from Frank and the few trusted individuals he encouraged me to seek out.

And sometimes, we must accept the fact that every person’s story deserves a resonating tone of mystery. We don’t need to know it all. Where would the magic be in that?

It is also worth stating that this book was written from Frank’s memories, Frank’s perspective. The opinions and attitudes expressed here are his. This is the way he sees things. This is his side of the story. He has a right to that as we all do.

Everyone knows you don’t accomplish great things alone. Many people have played a role in the preservation of the Nokota breed, and still do. Rightfully, they deserve their own story someday.

This is Frank’s story.

He saw something special in the native horses doomed for extinction in the Theodore Roosevelt National Park. He has spent over 40 years loving them and trying to find a way to help them. And even though the quest for a permanent home for his herd still goes on, the fact is, the Nokota® horse is here to stay because of Frank and his family. Maybe, just maybe, you and I can play a part of our own in helping Frank’s promise come to fruition.

Being a man who is kind, humble, and generous to a fault, Frank’s perspective is often hidden in the shadows. It is time for his story to be heard. He is, in my eyes, one of the greatest unsung heroes. So here, I will sing.

Prologue

June 4th, 1949

Standing strong on a prairie plain inside the fences of the newly dedicated Theodore Roosevelt National Memorial Park, black as a starless night, a wild stallion cleaves the spring air with his clarion whistle.

A blustery wind swirls the stallion’s mane up into a maelstrom of wildfire. His senses press out to the far reaches of the land. He is searching – always searching. His little band of mares and yearlings graze quietly below his overlook. They are safe, fed, and together. He makes sure of it.

The stud tosses his head and flares his nostrils. He seeks what he cannot take for himself – others like him. His ancestors. His family.

He cries out again. This time his call is threaded with lament – a cry for help.

He searches for one who would hear him. One who would fight for him. One who would make his family whole again.

 

April 4th, 1951

At the Kuntz family homestead in Saint Michael, North Dakota, a cry rings out from the upstairs bedroom in answer to that call. The fourth child, in the fourth month, on the fourth day, at 1:04 in the afternoon.

Frank Kuntz’s journey begins.

Follow Frank and the ponies on their journey from the beginning.

Sunday, December 1, 2024

BWL Publishing Inc. New Releases for December 2024

 Book 12 in our Canadian Historical Mysteries Collection - Alberta



The 1918 influenza pandemic strikes Calgary, Alberta, Canada. The Great War rages overseas. While her husband fights in Europe, Katharine works in a doctor’s office to support her children and her brother, a wounded veteran. One night their neighbour suddenly takes sick and dies. The attending doctor concludes the man died from influenza, but Katharine suspects someone laced his whisky with a drug that mimics the deadly flu’s symptoms. 

 

Katharine convinces the police to investigate. Worried about her brother’s involvement with a suspect, she delves into his secrets and comes to fear he’s connected to the murder. She grows disturbingly attracted to the investigating detective who returns her affections. He’s convinced her brother or someone else close to her is a killer and risks his career to pursue the crime. Katharine must discover the truth so she can move forward in a world that has changed forever.

 

Editorial Review, Nancy M. Bell

The Scots call whisky Usige beatha, the water of life. But what if  whisky becomes Usige bas, the water of death? It's the last winter of WW1 in Calgary, although the citizens don't know that yet, and prohibition is imposed on the population. The trade of illegal liquor is alive and well, the tendrils of that activity reaching into even the higher echelons of society. Two seemingly innocent, but connected deaths send Detective Tanner on a quest that leads him to rely on information provided by Katharine, an attractive neighbour of the deceased men whose brother may or may not be the murderer.  Calder has weaved a web of deceit and intrigue while salting the path with an array of red herrings, but in the end leads the reader to a satisfying conclusion.


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