1LesMiserables
Does anyone have a particular author that for their own peculiar reasons, they regard as associated with the Christmas period?
Dickens and Stevenson tick the boxes for me. The first more obvious, the second has been forged through habitual reading especially over the holiday season.
Dickens and Stevenson tick the boxes for me. The first more obvious, the second has been forged through habitual reading especially over the holiday season.
2LT79
>1 LesMiserables: I've no idea why but Empire of the Sun feels Christmassy to me for reasons I can't work out! Ballard isn't exactly a go to Christmas author.
3LesMiserables
>2 LT79: Interesting: I haven't read it, but doesn't it commence with the attacks on Pearl Harbour on December 7th, just short of Christmas? Probably irrelevant.
4HonorWulf
Well, I wouldn't call Salinger a Christmas author, but I always associate Catcher in the Rye with the winter holidays, especially after having spent a large part of my youth in NYC.
5LesMiserables
>4 HonorWulf: Love that book. Laugh out loud in parts.
6Shadekeep
Not an author so much as a genre, but I like classic weird fiction around Christmas time. Some of that may be the tradition of Christmas ghost stories, and a major factor is likely the days being their shortest and the nights their longest.
Certain crime novelists feel right for this time of year, too. I would say the works of Yrsa Sigurðardóttir, Friedrich Dürrenmatt, and Seishi Yokomizo all gain something extra in the Winter.
Certain crime novelists feel right for this time of year, too. I would say the works of Yrsa Sigurðardóttir, Friedrich Dürrenmatt, and Seishi Yokomizo all gain something extra in the Winter.
7LesMiserables
>6 Shadekeep: Ghost stories for sure. Beyond the obvious Christmas carol, James' Turn of the Screw comes to mind.
8LT79
>3 LesMiserables: that probably feeds into it but also the Spielberg film version adds another layer to the book and always seemed to be on tv over the Christmas holidays with the choir music Suo Gân playing throughout.
9SimB
>1 LesMiserables: & >8 LT79:
Yes, films do it for me "Santa Claus conquers the Martians" being my favorite!
Yes, films do it for me "Santa Claus conquers the Martians" being my favorite!
12RogerBlake
>4 HonorWulf: I just hope you are not a compulsive buyer of "The Catcher in the Rye :-)
13HonorWulf
>12 RogerBlake: No, I've been holding out for the Folio edition :)
14ambyrglow
I'm not Christian and don't celebrate Christmas, but The Dark Is Rising always floats to mind at this time of year. (I wish I liked the Folio illustrations better! Maybe they'll reissue it some day with new ones.)
15HonorWulf
>14 ambyrglow: We celebrate Jewish Christmas, which involves a gigantic Hanukkah Bush, light-up Reindeer and Snowmen, and a trip to the movies on Christmas Day followed by Chinese dinner. One of my favorite days of the year, especially when we get the Cognac eggnog flowing.
16L.Bloom
Laurence Sterne. Probably just because I read Tristram Shandy over a holiday break some years ago. Plus it's sort of just a fun and dare I say, jolly book.
17Shadekeep
>9 SimB: "Santa Claus conquers the Martians"
My brother and I watched that every year as kids, since syndicated UHF channels didn't have a lot to pick from back then. A good one to pair it with is Santa Claus versus The Devil.
My Christmas movie of choice now is Rare Exports.
My brother and I watched that every year as kids, since syndicated UHF channels didn't have a lot to pick from back then. A good one to pair it with is Santa Claus versus The Devil.
My Christmas movie of choice now is Rare Exports.
18PartTimeBookAddict
>11 HonorWulf: Have you ever read "Nothing Lasts Forever" by Roderick Thorp?
I've been meaning to give it a try soon.
I've been meaning to give it a try soon.
19HonorWulf
>18 PartTimeBookAddict: No, but I now want to -- thanks for the suggestion!
20boldface
Chapter 5: Dulce Domum of The Wind in the Willows, in which Ratty attempts to lift the spirits of a dejected Mole when they come across Mole's old home, cold and shut up, and then together rekindle the spirit of Christmas, complete with good food, a cheerful fire, carols and carol singers, "a last nightcap of mulled ale" and contented sleep. It's a good companion piece to Dickens's A Christmas Carol.
Other Christmassy reading I enjoy:
Carol singing with Laurie Lee in Cider with Rosie.
Dylan Thomas's A Child's Christmas in Wales.
C. S. Lewis's The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe.
Other Christmassy reading I enjoy:
Carol singing with Laurie Lee in Cider with Rosie.
Dylan Thomas's A Child's Christmas in Wales.
C. S. Lewis's The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe.
21PartTimeBookAddict
>19 HonorWulf: I hope it's good. I'm also planning to get a copy of "Mute Witness" which was the basis for "Bullitt."
As for Christmas authors: Dylan Thomas' "Child's Christmas", Truman Capote's "A Christmas Memory", L. Frank Baum's "The Life and Adventures of Santa" and Hammett's "The Thin Man."
As for Christmas authors: Dylan Thomas' "Child's Christmas", Truman Capote's "A Christmas Memory", L. Frank Baum's "The Life and Adventures of Santa" and Hammett's "The Thin Man."
22N11284
>20 boldface: I's hard to beat listening to Dylan Thomas reading A Child's Christmas in Wales. Wonderful melodious voice.
23SimB
I realize that "Santa Claus Conquers the Martians" maybe not on everyone's Christmas list, but Folio did a collection of musings from those far from home at this time of year. "A Traveller's Christmas". I'll probably take a dip into it, and remember the times I was away from family at Christmas. Then I'll put on "How to Make Gravy" by Paul Kelly and "Fairy Tale of New York" by the Pogues before the usual Christmas carols with the family around.
24betaraybill
For quite a few years now on Christmas Eve, after dinner and Midnight Mass (now held at 10:00 pm), after everyone is settled in for a long winter’s nap, I ascend to my library/sanctum sanctorum and pull out the same handful of books and once more read the following:
The short story Bless Me Father, For I Have Sinned by Ray Bradbury
The poem Winter Solstice, Camelot Station by John M. Ford, found in Invitation to Camelot, edited by Parke Godwin
Chapter XV of The Sword in the Stone
The first and last chapter from the volume “Christmas,” which is part of The Enchanted World series
The last line/paragraph from each of those works conjures up all the magic of Christmas.
Also, beginning in late November, I often listen to a wonderful unabridged audio book version of The Box of Delights.
Those are some of my Christmas authors/traditions.
The short story Bless Me Father, For I Have Sinned by Ray Bradbury
The poem Winter Solstice, Camelot Station by John M. Ford, found in Invitation to Camelot, edited by Parke Godwin
Chapter XV of The Sword in the Stone
The first and last chapter from the volume “Christmas,” which is part of The Enchanted World series
The last line/paragraph from each of those works conjures up all the magic of Christmas.
Also, beginning in late November, I often listen to a wonderful unabridged audio book version of The Box of Delights.
Those are some of my Christmas authors/traditions.
25LesMiserables
>24 betaraybill: Wonderful. And thanks for the enablement. As we have ro drive an hour to get to our Latin Mass community, it makes midnight mass rather difficult so we switched to 7am Low Mass instead. Looking forward to reading those.
26Lady19thC
Dickens for certain. Also Washington Irving's Old Christmas, Under the Greenwood Tree (Thomas Hardy), Little Women (Louisa May Alcott) and The Alchemist (Paulo Coelho) along with A Child's Christmas in Wales (Dylan Thomas) are traditional annual reads for me at Christmas!
28LesMiserables
>26 Lady19thC: Just listened DT reading A Child's Christmas in Wales. Loved it.
29betaraybill
>25 LesMiserables: Glad you liked what I offered. May the magic of Christmastime surround you this season. :)
30LesMiserables
>29 betaraybill: And to you, my friend.
31LesMiserables
>24 betaraybill: Just read your recommendation (?) The short story Bless Me Father, For I Have Sinned by Ray Bradbury.
Lovely.
Lovely.
32Shadekeep
One sci-fi story I like around this time of year is The New Father Christmas by Brian W. Aldiss.
34cwl
The Bell Jar, now available on a lovely FS edition. Plath perfectly captures the ebullient joy and love of family Christmas. Schopenhauer is also a firm Yuletide favourite.
35betaraybill
>31 LesMiserables: Thats great! I’m very pleased that you enjoyed it! The last line always gets me. So magical.
36betaraybill
>33 folio_books: I’m so happy that you liked it as well. It’s wonderful to share something like this. :)
37folio_books
>36 betaraybill:
It IS wonderful. Your recommendation really made my day. My reading ability is declining these days to the point where a short story is about the most I can hope to take in, so this was very welcome.
It IS wonderful. Your recommendation really made my day. My reading ability is declining these days to the point where a short story is about the most I can hope to take in, so this was very welcome.
38drizzled
My choice for this year's holidays is A Very Scalzi Christmas by Subterranean Press which I found on a second-hand market :)
39coynedj
>24 betaraybill: >31 LesMiserables: >33 folio_books: I've joined the club, reading the Bradbury story. And I'll join the choir in singing its praise - a lovely story indeed.
40SIGMASKIBIDI 





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42assemblyman
>24 betaraybill: >31 LesMiserables: >33 folio_books: >39 coynedj: Curiosity got the best of me so I have now also read it. Very enjoyable.
43LesMiserables
I begin afresh in Advent, a year long reading plan of the Bible, and it begins liturgically with Isaias with the clarion call on the coming of Christ.
I also love reading Luke 1 and 2.
So many translations to choose from, but my preference is the Douay-Rheims.
However with the decade's long anticipated Ignatius Study Bible just being released, using the RSV2CE translation, I'll most definitely try this out, given the accompanying scholarship.
I also love reading Luke 1 and 2.
So many translations to choose from, but my preference is the Douay-Rheims.
However with the decade's long anticipated Ignatius Study Bible just being released, using the RSV2CE translation, I'll most definitely try this out, given the accompanying scholarship.
44podaniel
>43 LesMiserables:
I've been reading the yet-to-be-completed Word on Fire Bible, based on the same translation. I've been enjoying it quite a bit but would be curious of your view of the Ignatius Study Bible.
I've been reading the yet-to-be-completed Word on Fire Bible, based on the same translation. I've been enjoying it quite a bit but would be curious of your view of the Ignatius Study Bible.
45LesMiserables
>44 podaniel: Of course. I imagine it won't arrive before February, but will check back.
46librarypowr
I have read Susan Cooper's "The Dark Is Rising" every Christmastide for over 40 years. I begin reading on Midwinter's Day (as the book begins" and pace myself through Epiphany (as the book ends.) One would think it becomes boring after a while, but I find Cooper's story so rich, so full of lore, so resonant for today's world.
Truman Capote's "A Christmas Memory" is also a yearly gift to myself, and I'm not sorry to say that Geraldine Page's Sook (from the television version of many years ago) has always been the image and voice in my head.
As a lover of folklore, the "Very Christmas" series from New Vessel Press has recently become a new delight - with multiple volumes featuring Ireland, Scandinavia, France, Italy, Germany, Mexico, Russia - and now volumes on Chanukkah and this year's intriguing one on India.
I also find the multiple volumes of Christmas and holiday mystery stories in the "British Library Crime Classics" series from Poisoned Pen Press to really fit the bill when I desperately need something short enough for a single sitting.
All of that being said, this year's gift to myself will be Niall Williams' "Time of the Child" - I absolutely cannot wait!
Truman Capote's "A Christmas Memory" is also a yearly gift to myself, and I'm not sorry to say that Geraldine Page's Sook (from the television version of many years ago) has always been the image and voice in my head.
As a lover of folklore, the "Very Christmas" series from New Vessel Press has recently become a new delight - with multiple volumes featuring Ireland, Scandinavia, France, Italy, Germany, Mexico, Russia - and now volumes on Chanukkah and this year's intriguing one on India.
I also find the multiple volumes of Christmas and holiday mystery stories in the "British Library Crime Classics" series from Poisoned Pen Press to really fit the bill when I desperately need something short enough for a single sitting.
All of that being said, this year's gift to myself will be Niall Williams' "Time of the Child" - I absolutely cannot wait!
47A.Godhelm
I think it's because the movies came out at Christmastime - I'd already read the books at that point, but ever since either re-reading or re-watching Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit has been a Christmas tradition. Serkis did some fantastic audiobook versions a couple of years ago, this year it's the Harper-Collins version of the Folio LE.
48betaraybill
>37 folio_books:: >39 coynedj:: >42 assemblyman:: To all who have read my Bradbury suggestion, I can’t tell you how happy I am that you have found it to be such a worthy read.
I’m more eager than ever to read it this year.
As the clock creeps toward midnight on the threshold of the winter solstice, I’m looking out at the freshly fallen snow here in Central Massachusetts, and I can’t help but think that “Christmas, like the snow, was everywhere.”
I’m more eager than ever to read it this year.
As the clock creeps toward midnight on the threshold of the winter solstice, I’m looking out at the freshly fallen snow here in Central Massachusetts, and I can’t help but think that “Christmas, like the snow, was everywhere.”
49raymac_97atyahoo.com
>2 LT79: Empire of the Sun is one I have out to contemplate in the next few days. Very worthwhile.
50raymac_97atyahoo.com
>1 LesMiserables: I always absorb Christmas Carol at this time. I feel I have to do that as it is so Christmassy and Tiny Tim is a picture of suffering in a humble way, like Jesus Christ..
51Macumbeira
>48 betaraybill: the text is free to find on the internet.
52betaraybill
>51 Macumbeira: Good to know!
53coynedj
>51 Macumbeira: >52 betaraybill: That's how I read it - I was surprised that I and my local library had nary a print copy.
54Macumbeira
Another recommendation: "Christmas Eve" in The collected stories of Nikolai Gogol. ( FS 2009 )
Nicely illustrated by Peter Stuart.
Nicely illustrated by Peter Stuart.
55Macumbeira
>53 coynedj: I had to look up the word nary...
56Pendrainllwyn
The Gospel authors Matthew and Luke who wrote about the birth of Jesus Christ deserve a mention here.
57LT79
>49 raymac_97atyahoo.com: You have quite an odd username, not sure if this is a real account. But yes Empire of the Sun is very worthwhile and one of my favourite novels. I've read it many times.
58Shadekeep
Christmas chapbooks used to be a tradition with a number of private presses, and a few still do them today. Here are some from my collection:
The Christmas Pudding (Incline Press)
Christmas Trees (Lone Oak Press)
Twelve Narratives for Christmas (Quarto Press)
The Faun's Christmas (Rose Valley Press)
The Legend of Saint Christopher (Rose Valley Press)
The Shoemaker's Christmas (Rose Valley Press)
A Compendium of Carols: Holiday Verses (Thornwillow)
The Christmas Pudding (Incline Press)
Christmas Trees (Lone Oak Press)
Twelve Narratives for Christmas (Quarto Press)
The Faun's Christmas (Rose Valley Press)
The Legend of Saint Christopher (Rose Valley Press)
The Shoemaker's Christmas (Rose Valley Press)
A Compendium of Carols: Holiday Verses (Thornwillow)
59LesMiserables
>56 Pendrainllwyn: True, I did mention St. Luke above in #43, but not St. Matthew.
>55 Macumbeira: Similar to the Glaswegian 'nane'.
>55 Macumbeira: Similar to the Glaswegian 'nane'.
60Macumbeira
The Christmas chapter in Moby Dick ? The Pequod setting sail in Nantucket in ice-cold weather ?
61Levin40
Some great suggestions here. A few more which I don't see mentioned above:
- Village Christmas - Laurie Lee
- Jeeves and the Yule-tide Spirit - Wodehouse
- The Shortest Day - Susan Cooper
- Ariel Poems - T S Eliot, esp. The Journey of the Magi and The Cultivation of Christmas Trees
ETA: and I forgot the incredible 'Shapechangers in Winter' by Margaret Atwood.
- Village Christmas - Laurie Lee
- Jeeves and the Yule-tide Spirit - Wodehouse
- The Shortest Day - Susan Cooper
- Ariel Poems - T S Eliot, esp. The Journey of the Magi and The Cultivation of Christmas Trees
ETA: and I forgot the incredible 'Shapechangers in Winter' by Margaret Atwood.
62Macumbeira
>61 Levin40:
jotted down : Ariel Poems - T S Eliot, esp. The Journey of the Magi and The Cultivation of Christmas Trees
yeah ! have it in my "collected poems" bundle
jotted down : Ariel Poems - T S Eliot, esp. The Journey of the Magi and The Cultivation of Christmas Trees
yeah ! have it in my "collected poems" bundle
63boldface
>61 Levin40:
>62 Macumbeira:
. . . and the Christmas Poems of U. A. Fanthorpe, eg. 'BC:AD' and 'The Sheepdog'.
>62 Macumbeira:
. . . and the Christmas Poems of U. A. Fanthorpe, eg. 'BC:AD' and 'The Sheepdog'.
64Son.of.York
Several of those mentioned above.
I don’t have a strict regular, but most years I reread one of these:
> Dickens, A Christmas Carol
> Thomas, A Child’s Christmas in Wales
> Jane Austen, one or other of the novels
Last year: Graham, The Wind in the Willows
But this year: Armitage (trans.), Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, definitely a Christmas story.
I don’t have a strict regular, but most years I reread one of these:
> Dickens, A Christmas Carol
> Thomas, A Child’s Christmas in Wales
> Jane Austen, one or other of the novels
Last year: Graham, The Wind in the Willows
But this year: Armitage (trans.), Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, definitely a Christmas story.
65stopsurfing
This year I’m rereading Nan Shepherd’s The Living Mountain, I’m thinking of making this my Christmas tradition.