Thursday, December 18, 2025

Memories from Christmas Past By Nancy M Bell

 


To find more of my books please click on the cute cover above.


Christmas is a time for family and remembering. This post was originally written in the 1980s when my boys were still young (and so was I lol). We were embarking on a new adventure, but leaving behind many cherished memories as well.


Christmas at Brandy Hollow 


There is nothing quite like a country Christmas. In this fast paced world there are very few of us who have the chance to live on a small farm and experience the joys of working with the land. When we sold Brandy Hollow I began to say goodbye to all the little things that are so much a part of living here. Suddenly I realized that on this particular Christmas (1988) I wouldn’t be snug in my little house in the hollow. Perhaps because I wouldn’t be in Brandy Hollow for Christmas I wanted to share the Christmas’ we celebrated here.

The times when the snow blossomed against the living room window and laced the cedar trees, bending the woods under its weight. In the new light of morning the horses would blow the snow up in puffs with their snorts and then roll and run and roll again. There is a special stillness here after a snow fall, especially a Christmas snow. Last year (1987) it came on December 23rd, but is was still a Christmas snow. The sun just catching the tops of the cedar and birch in the barnyard and the blue jays and chickadees already searching for seeds. The gentle hand of  morning air sending sparkles dancing from the delicate fingers of the snow dressed trees. The warm smell of horses and hay when you step into the barn from the frosty stillness of early morning.

The warm glow of my little living room, the sun coming in the south facing window, a fire in the woodstove and the Christmas tree taking over the room. Because why shouldn’t the  tree be big and bushy? Every year we rearrange the furniture so we can fit the tree in and by Christmas morning there are presents under the tree, in the tree, around the tree and presents across the floor in front of the hearth as well. The just waiting for all that lovely ribbon and paper to be theirs. The lovely peace of Christmas Eve when the children are asleep and us old folks are waiting up for Santa. The scent of the fire and the flicker of the flames against the pine wood walls. The dogs sleeping on the mat my Grandfather Pritchard made in front of the stove, joined by most of the five house cats. There is that special thrill of anticipation that comes only on Christmas Eve. The warm feeling of love that accompanies the presents, given and received. The sharing of joy in giving that perfect gift. The dark quietness of the night, moonlight throwing blue and sliver shadows on the snow as I go out to the barn to tuck in the horses on this most special of all nights. The music of the wind in the trees and the starfire crackling in the stillness as I take a Christmas walk by the pond and take the opportunity to say my own private thank you to the spirit that created all this wonder.

There is a peace in this farm and always a feeling of love and belonging. As though this house and this land have always been loved. But never is the feeling so strong as at Christmas. Even people who aren’t sensitive to their surroundings feel this too, this goodwill that pervades the very air. Strays find their way to my door, both wild and tame and human as well as animal. This is a safe place and a healing place. There is a little bit of that Christmas love that lingers here all year.

My Christmas wish for you and yours will know the peace and joy, and that ‘all things bright and beautiful’ and ‘all things wise and wonderful’ will be yours.


Wishing you all the best for the Holiday Season. Merry Christmas, Happy Solstice, Happy Hanukkah or whatever you celebrate during this season of returning light.  

 


Tuesday, December 16, 2025

Christmas Stockings by Janet Lane Walters

 


https://www.bookswelove.com/search?q=walters


Every year. I make stockings for the family. This year 5 were already sent to Florida and 2 to Georgia. The remaining 9 are here under the Christmas tree of the decorated coffee table waiting for opening on Christmas morning. Every year, starting in July or August, I start finding interesting things to put in the stockings. This year, one of the newest are wrist cuffs for the handymen in the family. It's magnatized and will hold nails and screws for when they are  working. 


Will they work, I hope so. 


There are the usual lotions and chapsticks in various flavors. Each stocking has a new ornament for the tree. Everyone gets at least one new pair of socks. Candy also goes into every stocking. This year is the first time I haven't driven myself to the various places so the internet was the source for many of these things. Always fun to do a search for unusual things. 

 

I'm wishing everyone a great Christmas and a wonderful new year.

Christmas in the Bahamas, by J.C. Kavanagh

 

For the teen or young adult on your Christmas list - this is it! Click the link below: 
https://www.bookswelove.com/shop/series/the-twisted-climb

Christmas has always been a special time for me. I love the religious significance and I love the special outpouring of love and generosity shared between family and strangers alike. Christmas 2025 will mark a special milestone for me and my partner, Ian. We'll be celebrating Christmas on our sailboat, approximately 3,000 miles from home, anchored in the blue waters of the Bahamas. 

I’m proud to admit that decorating during this festive season is one of my favourite things. I even brought a few items from home to Christmas-fy our sailboat. But this season has stirred many deep nostalgic emotions... Christmas time with my mom. You see, for many years, I'd spend time with my Irish-born mother and decorate her lovely apartment. It was always a two or three day event! She would sit in her reclining armchair and orchestrate the placement of all things Christmas. "The tree needs more lights!" she would say, or "there should be Santas in every room," (even the bathroom), or "you missed a spot on the tree." I'd laugh and fill in the 'empty' spot with one of her three (four?) hundred tree ornaments, many of them dating back to when I was a child. We'd listen to Christmas carols on her vintage stereo and I would sign along with her - she in her sweet soprano voice and me quite often in an operatic screech. Well, not always a screech. I would never do that to 'Ave Maria.' Mom passed on December 3, 2023 after a battle with cancer. So Christmas brings joy to me but also a longing for Mom's presence. I guess grief never really goes away...



Christmas decorating at Mom's apartment - so festive!

This year, in honour of my mother's passion for all things Christmas, I decorated my sailboat with all the love I could gather in my heart, and with all the special memories that accompany that love.

The main salon in our sailboat

The cockpit looking forward

The cockpit looking aft.

Enjoy this Christmas season with all your heart! And don't forget to tell the ones you love, that you love them.


J.C. Kavanagh, author of
The Twisted Climb - A Bright Darkness (Book 3) Best YA Book FINALIST at Critters Readers Poll 2022
AND
The Twisted Climb - Darkness Descends (Book 2) voted BEST Young Adult Book 2018, Critters Readers Poll and Best YA Book FINALIST at The Word Guild, Canada
AND
The Twisted Climb,
voted BEST Young Adult Book 2016, P&E Readers Poll
Voted Best Local Author, Simcoe County, Ontario, 2021
Novels for teens, young adults and adults young-at-heart
Email: author.j.c.kavanagh@gmail.com
www.facebook.com/J.C.Kavanagh 
www.amazon.com/author/jckavanagh
Instagram @authorjckavanagh
https://www.bookswelove.com/shop/series/the-twisted-climb


Sunday, December 14, 2025

Harvest Wine by Graeme Smith

       




 

HARVEST WINE 

 

Even in Summer the night comes of a time. And as the sun falls to the mountains, as the night yawns fresh from sleeping and opens the stars it wears as eyes, then a wanderer’s thoughts turn to setting the Long Road aside, if only for a moment. And if that wanderer’s pockets bear copper, and silver beyond? Well then. A bottle and bed, and food in a belly might seem a thing to find. And so it was. 

If the Inn had a name, then it seemed time’s toil had set it aside some day long past. A sign hung in air un-moving, yet still warm from the day’s heat. A sheaf of corn? A laughing cow? Who knew. But the door stood wide, that the air inside stay sweet. And where such a door was found, then meat and drink, and even room or cot might also lie to greet passed silver. 

She stood a while, and stretched. It had been a long day’s walking and of a time it was worth while to take stillness for companion. And as she stretched, the worn scabbard at her side rang gentle against the ring of her mail, and as she stretched, the lean muscles beneath the mail kinked and let her know what they thought of long miles and short rations. And she wondered what her mother would have said to see her, a Walker of the Long Road. No great one of the old Tales, but many had found it unwise to cross her path in anger. And as she remembered the small farm where she had grown she smiled fondly, to remember those days gone when all that need be done was to gather the eggs and perhaps a posy for her mother. 

But old days make new graves, as her father used to say, and this was none of either. And the Inn waited.  

Inside the door, there were but few patrons. As she entered, it seemed the room stood silent and—and somehow grim. Of a moment, unnoticed, her hand found the hilt of her blade. But as she stood framed in the door the eyes that turned to her took one look and, it seemed, brightened to see a fresh face among them. 

“Ho, Queen Grape! It seems we have fresh company for thine arts!”  

The cheery voice came from a fat and red faced fellow sat near the ale barrels. His face was round and his smile broad, and the hand that waved a mug full of ale through the air in welcome was skilled and practiced not to spill a single drop. 

She smiled. “Might ye be Keeper here?”  

“Hah! Fat Findle, Keeper? Oh, in his dreams mayhap, and then if I had a bed new made, and that of twice thick oak!” The new voice came from the kitchens, and it danced lively before the woman who followed it out. “Martha I am, though Queen Grape they call me, my dear. And once there was a Keeper, my Andrin. But he be gone now. And it seems those near would have me stay, and so I stayed. And thus the Harvest Grape is still a place ye may find, and enter, and see! Ye have done so!” And without more ado, the slim built woman with long blonde hair swept up to her and wrapped her arms about her and gave her a squeeze fit to burst! “I’m sorry, warrior maid. Or no, not really. We do not stand on ceremony here… and ye looked for a moment so like…” The woman stopped, and it seemed a shadow passed over her face. “No matter… Now. Let us see. You don’t come from the town, and the dust still sits to thy soles. It’s a long road ye have walked to come here. Thus and so—but yet, ye stand alone. Hmmmm… Of course. The Long Road?” 

The Long Road. The by-name for the journeys of warrior and wanderer, vagabond and sell-sword. And a road well travelled by those who had little care to offer name or history to others. The woman waited, as was custom, for her to offer what she would or keep silent as she might. With a rueful smile for the bed she had pondered, she spoke what must be said. “None pace the Road behind me that might threaten this place. And I the same. No danger do I bring you. A full stomach and a wet windpipe, and I’ll be away. There are fields in plenty near…” 

“We’ll have none of that! Why, what do ye take us for? Do ye see, my—my first husband, he... Well. He Walked as ye do, and none the less for that! Hmmm—are any with ye?” 

At Martha’s words, though cheery they were, it seemed a small hush fell over the room. It was little surprise to her, for it was not unknown for bands to send forth a scout to make spy of a place they sought to make victim. And a woman? Well, why not? “The Long Road? Aye. And for now... Well. For now it seems my footsteps have no echo beside them." The sell-sword shrugged. "Well, of course I might lie.”  

The Inn-keep laughed. “Not ye, my dear. Or not tonight. I know an honest face when I see one, and thine? well. Enough. I could read a lie in thee, trust me in this.” Again a shadow seemed to cross Martha’s face. But it was swift gone. “Now. The venison is near ready." She grinned. "Though ask not how we came by it”. Martha grinned again. “So what think ye? Venison roast, fine potatoes fresh dug by Fattie Findle there, and the ale in his mug the reason, roast onion and red carrot? Hmmm… and to drink…” 

“Heh… what of his ale?” as she spoke, she felt the cheery manner of the place set about her.  

“Only if ye must, lady! Think on, she is not called Queen Grape for lack of reason!” At the speaking from another near, the whole room erupted in laughter.  

The sell-sword laughed. “Well, let me not set aside such fame! It seems I am in thy hands, Queen Grape, and that full willing!” She turned to the one called Findle, and raised an eyebrow. “Queen Grape?”  

Findle laughed also. “Heh, well, aye. It may be I seek ale, but for the blood of the vine, there is none better than the Queen’s Harvest Wine. Do ye see, there is not a grape in it that does not come from the Inn’s own growing. And there are those that will tell ye she doth sit and speak to each grape as it grows, aye and polish and tend each one as though it were her own daugh…” Findle stopped, and hurriedly looked about to see if any had heard his words. His face was a cross from sadness to near fear. With a mutter she could not hear, he put down his ale, stood swift and left the room. 

With hustle and bustle Queen Grape came forth from the kitchens, and she bore a platter steaming high with those things she had offered. The same was set to a table near, and the sell-sword needed none of urging to sit to its attention. And Findle? He was a passed memory set far from her compared to rich venison, and hot gravy and red carrots. As she first lifted dagger to meat, there was a hush across the room. She looked up, and Martha was smiling.  

“Did ye not thirst? Good meat needs company!” And in Martha’s hands was a small cask set with a tap, and in her hands was a glass and the glass glowed red with rich wine. Seeing Martha’s expectant eyes, the sell-sword took the glass and set it to her lips. Now ale was a thing she took when she could, and many more a mountain stream had quenched her thirst. But wine of a time she found, and it was none of ill to her. But the wine in her hands slipped to her throat as smooth and light as a lass’s glance to her lover, and it passed to her like fire and ice both, and as she drank she felt freshed and new, like waking to a new dawn in a soft bed. “Why, that is marvellous! Never have I tasted such!”  

Martha nodded. “Ah, that is our Harvest Wine. It seems not unpleasant to those that find it. And ye come at an auspicious time. For this is the last cask of last year’s making. And later… ah, but ye will see.” 

With one more smile, Martha took herself away, and the sell-sword fell to the platter before her. And of a time she would sip on the glass that sat to her side, and each sip was nectar. And when she was done, Martha returned. And when all was cleared, and the platters gone, she could not but tell Martha that her kitchen was indeed fine, and her regal name was most well earned! 

“ Heh… glad I am that the wine pleases ye, but let me not claim too much of credit. For that which comes out of the oak must first be found on the vine, and none of my doing will put there what is not. And our vine is well set in good ground, and the grape be close friend to the Inn. I wonder… would ye care to see it?” 

Now a grape vine used for the making of wine was not a thing the sell-sword had ever seen, and it seemed but courtesy, so she agreed gladly. And she followed Queen Grape through the kitchens to the rear of the Inn. And there she found a thing she had indeed never seen. For as far as she could see were tall bushes set to the ground, but where she expected to see them heavy with grapes, there were but buds and leaf. 

Martha nodded. “I can see thy question. The grapes, and this Summer? This vine is late growing, and that will give it more of the spirit ye have found. And thus when others harvest, we wait, and when the snows come, we will harvest.” 

As the sell-sword looked about, she saw tall stakes set about the vines, and each had a small mannequin set high upon it, and as she counted, she saw some twelve. And the nearest stared to the sky with a wild and frightening grimace. She took a step back, her hand to her blade hilt. 

Seeing her so, Martha burst into laughter. “Hah! A fine warrior maid ye be! But so long as the crows and the like feel the same, then my grapes will not be their feeding! Do ye see, they be like unto the farmers use, and my little ones…” the same shadow came to Martha's eyes “ … well, they let the vine keep to its business that I might keep mine.” 

Seeing the shadow, and remembering Findle’s manner, she could wait no more. “Martha… what ill is it? Ye speak… and it seems there is woe to it.”  

“Oh, it is no matter. I am but an old besom. But… but once I had a daughter. She… she was lost to me. She—she fell to illness. And I know what those fools in the common room speak of, that I tend each grape as though it were my own. Aye, but that is but good growing. And they hear me speak of these… well, of these ye see here as my little ones and they think me mazed, mayhap. But it is an old sorrow, and a past one.” 

And the sell-sword let the matter go, for it was clearly of trial to the Inn’s mistress.  

Martha nodded again, more firmly. “But enough. Today is the day, and tonight is the time, and by thy coming there may be more profit in this than ye know. Let me guess, ye feel well fed, but a soft bed and fine sheets would not be ill to thee?” 

The sell-sword grimaced. Soft beds and fine sheets were not a thing any that walked the Long Road would meet oft, but her pouch was not so full she had gold to spare. 

Seeing her hand dart to her belt, Martha laughed again. “Oh, worry not. We have fine straw and good pallets. But this night is the night it is, and there is a thing we do. For the last cask of the Harvest Wine is to be emptied, do ye see. And there is a game we play. For we pass the cask around, and the one that finds the last glass, why their scot is made clear, and our finest they have, aye, and the best of our beds besides! Come, come!” And the two went back to the Commons, and there now sat pride of place on a table the small oak cask that Martha had brought earlier. And those present sat about, and as Martha entered, a chant arose. 

“ Summer come and Summer past, who will drink the last glass? Blood of grape and all is given, drink the glass and all forgiven!” 

Then Queen Grape took down a large flagon, and she passed each there a scrap of parchment, and each made their mark. And as the parchment came to the sell-sword, she set a small scritch of a sword blade to it, for she could read, but she had none of lettering. And all the marks were set to the flagon, and they were stirred about. Then Queen Grape set her hand to the flagon and draw a mark, and the one that had made it would go to the cask and draw a glass of wine. And as each drew, they would sit, and wait for the next to go, for there might or might not be more wine to come. And as each was called, there was more of wine, and each had a glass, and then… then it was the sell-sword's mark that came! And she went to the cask and drew her glass, and the wine filled it. And then next was called, and the next set their glass to the cask, but none came forth! 

The room chanted, each one there and all. “ Last glass, last glass, will we feast or will we fast?”  

The sell-sword looked confused, and Queen Grape took pity on her. “ Well, do ye see, it would not seem fair that one had all and all had none. So, and only if ye choose, all here may feast on our finest, as ye will, though they must to their own beds. And all will be set to thy tariff, but do ye see, as last glass, thy tariff is set aside. So the choice is thine. All may feast, or ye may make them fast! And if I might say, they are ruffians all and I would have full understanding if ye made them watch while ye feasted alone!” And the room laughed, if, it might be said, a little nervously.  

The sell-sword looked about, and she smiled. And after a pause to tease them, she called it loud. “Then let the feast begin!” And so it was. And all the time, at Martha’s request, the glass she had drawn sat waiting and she had the best ale the house had to offer to drink. And when all was done, those present called their gratitude, and she was sat to the centre of the commons, and the glass before her, and she took it, and as Queen Grape had coached her, she drank, and when she was done, she set it down and she spoke what Martha told her to speak. “Summer come and Summer past, I and mine the last glass? Blood of grape and all is given, glass is gone and all forgiven!” And the room cheered. After those who had other beds to find had gone Martha took her to the Inn’s rooms, and the best was set before her, and indeed the bed was fine. And the sheets? Never had she found sheets so soft! And after making sure she had all that she needed, Queen Grape left her, and she took her to sleep. And sleep came swift. And she dreamed.  

And in her dream, as still she slept, she seemed far from her and looking down. And the door opened to her room, and Queen Grape entered. And as Martha stood by the bed, the one that slept there woke. And as it woke, the small one that slept there spoke. “Mama! What comes? It is yet dark! 

And Queen Grape spoke. And she said, “We must see to the vine, little one.” And the one that slept rose, and still unclad, it took the hand of the one it had called Mama, and it followed her. And they went to the vines. And the moon stood full and high. And Queen Grape spoke. “Come my children, and greet thy sister. For the vine must drink and I am hungered.” The vines rustled and hissed in the night wind. And of a sudden they came, and the twelve  high poles that had scared crows were most empty. And those that came were small, and all of bone that walked, and they bore sharp bony claws, and those claws lifted her and set her on the vine’s thorns, and the vine twisted and reared, and bound her tight, and the thorns bit and tore and her blood flowed. And the vine drank, and the grape’s blood was made new. And her sisters had sharp teeth, and those teeth tore at her, and the flesh was rended from her in long strips, till all that flesh was gone and nothing save bone remained. And all the time the sell-sword did not wake, though she struggled to. And at last she knew, that she would not wake, nor ever sleep again. 

And Queen Grape feasted well that night.  

And of a Summer’s day, of a year come and Fall coming, Queen Grape stood at the vine, and another was with her. And Queen Grape spoke and her words drifted to ears that heard. “Hah! A fine warrior maid ye be! But so long as the crows and the like feel the same, then my grapes will not be their feeding! Do ye see, they be like unto the farmers use, and my little ones… well, they let the vine keep to its business that I might keep mine.” 

And thirteen mannequins nodded in the breeze. For tonight? Tonight was Harvest Wine.  


Saturday, December 13, 2025

Merry Christmas and Happy Baking


Here in Vermont we are currently in a deep freeze and there's snow on the ground. In short, it's beginning to look a lot like Christmas!

I'd like to share with you a wonderful lemon shortbread cookie recipe that was hard won,

To explain: shortly after I moved to Vermont, I was invited to join our local Woman's Club by the owner of our local bookstore (the first pace I visited, naturally!).  Well, this vintage 1901 Woman's Club does marvelous community involvement ... high school senior scholarships, support of shelters, food pantries, art and literature awards for local schoolchildren. We even bake heart-shaped cookies on Valentine's Day and deliver them to hard-working folks at the library, firehouse, police station, government offices.

Which brings me to our stellar town-widereputation as bakers.

But were these famous bakers going to share their secrets with me? Not on your life! I'd try to go at it sideways: "Diane, this velvet cake is so good! How do you get that frosting so smooth and delicious?" Diane proceeds to look both ways as if about to divulge the nuclear code, before she whispers: "Cream cheese." At last...a clue!

Finally, after saying yes to many projects and activities that serve, I was given the ultimate compliment---a recipe to guide me though providing a dessert for our scholarship fundraising Spaghetti Dinner.

I share it with you now, as I've always been terrible at keeping secrets. Here's your guide to the most tangy/sweet, melt in your mouth lemon shortbread cookies you'll ever taste! Merry Christmas and happy baking, dear readers!

Lemon Meltaway Cookies


for the cookies:


1 cup butter

1/3 cup sugar

1 egg

1 lemon for zest

2 cups flour

1/2 teaspoon baking powder

1/2 teaspoon salt


For the glaze, combine:

2 cups powdered sugar

1/2 teaspoon cream of tartar

3 tablespoons lemon juice

1 tablespoon heavy cream


  1. in large bowl. Cream butter with sugar, Mix in egg. Stir in lemon zest.
  2. Add 1/2 cup flour, baking power and salt, until combined. Continue adding flour by 1/2 cup until completely combined.
  3. Use a small cookie scoop or tablespoon to measure dough, then slightly flatten with your palm.
  4. Bake at 375 degrees for 8-9 minutes or until cookie center is just set. Cookies will remain light and not get brown. Let the cookies sit for 2 minutes, then transfer them to a cooling rack.
  5. Once the cookies are cool, dip the tops in the glaze. Let dry and harden.


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