I originally published this post last December. It was published just three days before Christmas, so I thought I would re-post it this year earlier in the month. Read on for some books to help you get in the holiday spirit!
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Amid
all the holiday festivities sometimes it is nice to just sit quietly and
read a good book. Here is some suggested reading to get you in the
Yuletide holiday spirit, particularly if you like folklore and strange
Christmas stories.
The Dark Is Rising
Susan Cooper
1974
This
novel is aimed at young readers and I loved it when it came out way
back in the 1970s. Many other people have loved it since. The Dark Is Rising tells
the story of an eleven-year old boy who becomes involved in a battle
between the ancient forces of light and darkness during the Christmas
season. I’ve re-read the book as an adult, and the first chapters still
wonderfully evoke the excitement of the holiday season and the uncanny
dread of the oncoming darkness. The Dark Is Rising is set in England and
full of British folklore, but author Susan Cooper has lived in
Massachusetts for many years and was partially inspired to write the
book by the marshy landscapes of the South Shore.
The Battle for Christmas: A Social and Cultural History of Our Most Cherished Holiday
Stephen Nissenbaum
1997
Ever
wonder why Americans celebrate Christmas the way we do? Nissenbaum’s
book traces the development of our modern child-focused and gift-focused
holiday from the raucous holidays of the past. Several chapters in The Battle for Christmas
focus specifically on early New England, looking at why the Puritans hated
Christmas, which people celebrated Christmas despite it being banned, and
how capitalism shaped the holiday. Christmas used to be a multi-week
drunken orgy when the lower classes extorted food and liquor from the
wealthy. Nissenbaum explains how it became a holiday where we sit peacefully around
Christmas trees and exchange presents.
A Visit from St. Nicholas
Clement Clarke Moore
1823
Do you
exchange presents at Christmas time? Do you incorporate Santa Claus into
you celebrations? Do you spend the holiday with your family? If you
answered yes to any of these questions, you can thank Clement Clarke
Moore. Moore was a prominent New York City clergyman who was annoyed at
the drunken Christmas celebrations that kept disrupting his family’s
peaceful home. Moore wrote “A Visit from St. Nicholas’ in 1823 to
encourage a gentler, sober and more familial holiday. And it worked!
Moore’s poem permanently shaped the way Americans and much of the world
celebrate Christmas.
The Festival
H.P. Lovecraft
1923
A
man returns to his family’s ancestral Massachusetts home for their
traditional Yuletide festivities. Since this is an H.P. Lovecraft story,
tradition doesn’t mean candy canes and stockings hung by the fire.
Moldering grave yards, strange subterranean realms, and sinister
cultists all play a role in the festivities, as does that famous book of
forbidden knowledge The Necronomicon. If you think your family
has a weird holiday reading “The Festival" will put things in perspective. Although the story
is set in Kingsport, a seaside town “maggoty” with subterraneous evil,
Lovecraft based the setting on Marblehead, a town whose Colonial-era
architecture he loved.
Christmas in New England
Amy Whorf McGuiggan
2006
Although
McGuiggan’s book touches on Christmas’s troubled history in Puritan New
England, it’s real focus is on how people have celebrated the holiday
here for the last two centuries. Christmas in New England touches
on all the region’s Yuletide greats: the many carols composed here, how
lighthouse keepers marked the holiday, and the guy from Maine who
invented earmuffs. A book to read when you want to feel good about the
world.
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
Anonymous
Late 14th Century
There’s
zero connection to New England in this 14th century poem, but it’s
still fantastic reading for the holiday season. Sir Gawain beheads a
gigantic Green Knight who has interrupted King Arthur's New Year’s
party. The Green Knight picks up his severed head and exits the hall,
telling Sir Gawain to come visit him in one year so he can in turn chop
off Gawain’s head. Yikes. Being an honorable knight, Gawain departs
Camelot the following year to find the unkillable Green Knight’s distant
abode, but gets delayed at the castle of Sir Bertilak and his lovely
young wife, where a multi-day Christmas celebration is happening. The
Bertilaks play strange and erotic mind-games with Gawain, and a twist
ending changes our perception of the entire poem.
Hildur, Queen of the Elves and Other Stories: Icelandic Folk Tales
J.M. Bedell
2015
Again,
no connection to New England, but lots of dark folk stories from
Iceland. Many of them are set at Christmas time. The elves in these
tales are not cute and whimsical, but instead are strange, dangerous,
and often murderous. As are the trolls, witches, and lustful ghosts with
shattered skulls who appear. Merry Christmas? This book is holiday
reading for those of you who wish every holiday was like Halloween.
Whelp, off on another Book hunt I go! Thanks Peter!
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