Do You Have New Year’s Day Traditions?

I’ve talked a lot this month about Christmas traditions, but do you have New Year’s Day traditions? The only one my family observes regularly is undecorating our Christmas tree. My mom usually did this on New Year’s Day when I was a kid and I’ve carried on the tradition. I like the idea of putting away the Christmas decorations on the first day of the new year. No matter how fun Christmas has been, it’s time to move on. I also take down the tree on that because we have a live tree, and it makes my husband very nervous to leave it up for more than two weeks. He thinks live Christmas trees are fire hazards and is relieved to see it come down on the first day of the new year.

What about you? What are your New Year’s Day traditions?

My Christmas Eve Poem for You

I’m posting today instead of on Thursday, and I’m doing my annual posting of my Christmas Eve poem for you. I think it conveys the basic meaning of Christmas. May God bless you today, tomorrow, and throughout the New Year!

Favorite Christmas Foods

What are some favorite Christmas foods that you only make during the holidays? Spritz cookies are a Christmas only treat at my house. For years, my mom would make fried oysters for Christmas dinner, and that was the only time we would have them.

Let me know about your favorite Christmas foods.

Writing a Christmas Mystery

Since I’ve been reviewing Christmas mysteries, I thought I’d repost this article on writing a Christmas mystery.

For some reason, Christmas and mysteries go together like silver and gold on a Christmas tree. Christmas mysteries are a very old tradition in the genre. One of the first, and best, is “The Adventure of the Blue Carbuncle”, a Sherlock Holmes story. Hercule Poirot and Miss Marple had Christmas cases. So did Nero Wolfe, Ellery Queen, V.I. Warshawski, Brother Cadfael, and Father Brown. Maybe the mystery of God coming to earth, fully God and and fully human, gives the whole season an air of the unexplainable. If you’d like to try your hand at this very specific sub-genre, here are a two tips about writing a Christmas mystery.

The Story Can’t Take Place at Any Other Time

The best Christmas mysteries take advantage of what the season offers. In “A Christmas Party” by Rex Stout, the boss of an interior design firm is murdered during the Christmas office party. The man who was working the bar in a Santa Claus outfit disappears during the confusion created when the boss collapses from cyanide poisoning. Santa was so heavily made-up no one at the party can describe him.

Christmas gives Agatha Christie the perfect reason for warring members of an extended family to gather at the family estate in the country in Murder for Christmas. It’s hard to imagine another plausible reason for relatives who dislike each other to come into contact with each other, except maybe, a funeral or wedding. In “The Flying Stars”. author G.K. Chesterton uses the English Christmas tradition of the pantomime as the key plot point.

One of the many fun qualities of “The Adventure of the Blue Carbuncle” is how well it incorporates characteristics of Christmas that existed at the time Sir Arthur Conan Doyle wrote it. A commissionaire who is an acquaintance of Holmes, finds a precious stone, the blue carbuncle, in the crop of the goose his wife was going to roast for Christmas dinner. Holmes and Watson follow clues through a bitterly cold London night to figure how the jewel, stolen from a luxury hotel, ended up in the goose. 

Include Themes of the Season

Another quality you can take advantage of are the meanings of the season. One aspect of “The Adventure of the Blue Carbuncle” that makes it so special is the offer Holmes extends to the culprit once he uncovers him. “The Killer Christian” by Andre Klavan is about redemption. In my Christmas mystery, “A Rose from the Ashes”, I used themes of mercy and forgiveness as my teen detective Rae Riley attempts to discover who her father is and if he tried to murder her mother when she was pregnant with Rae.

Writers, have you written a Christmas story? What was it about? Readers, what Christmas story uses the holiday setting effectively?

Least Favorite Christmas Song

What’s your least favorite Christmas song? You know the ones I mean. As soon as you hear it, you cringe inside and turn it off, if that’s possible. Sometimes it’s not the song itself, but a particular version of it. I heard Cher sing “O Holy Night” on the radio while driving and nearly ran off the road. I was used to how my mom sang it. She’s an opera-trained soprano. Hearing Cher launch into the high notes with her pop voice made it impossible to focus on my driving.

I don’t think I’ve ever heard a version of “Feliz Navidad” I like. I do like the upbeat tune, but the endlessly repeating lyrics makes me reach for the button or anti-anxiety meds.

So let me hear from you. Which one is your least favorite Christmas song?

For more Christmas prompts, click here.

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