Family, Crafts, and Christmas

Assorted felt and painted ornaments

Whether they’re handmade by me or someone else, if they’re on my tree, I love them

In our family, crafts and Christmas wrap together in the perfect package of love, talent, sequins, and thread. The crafting began patterned after my mom’s abilities and my sister’s creativity ’round about kindergarten. Mom’s earliest sewing lessons revolved around Barbie doll outfits and Christmas ornaments. When I sat my butt down long enough, and I didn’t have a book in my hands, I held one needle or another, a craft project in my lap whether I sat cross-legged on the floor or sank into our Pee-Wee-Herman-sized couch. From sewing needles to cross stitch needles to dull, oversized plastic canvas needles, my mom and sister patiently taught me the various sewing crafts. Thanks to them, my Christmas ornament collection began when I was six.

Snuggled next to my mom, I channeled her love and energy into my crafts until I held an amazing, glittery, finished product. Well, amazing to the eyes of a child in the beginning; but with practice, pride, and passion, they organically grew into the ornaments I enjoy even today.

snowman ornament, tangled in lights

One of my favorite snowmen, made by Mom in the nineties

It might have started because my mom stayed home to raise us, and my dad worked hard at the business he owned. My parents pinched pennies to feed us, clothe us, and save for college. How much did it cost to buy a pair of jeans, or corduroys? More than it cost my mom to buy fabric and whip up something.  Out came her sewing machine, the whirl and click-click-click of the foot pedal as she zipped up one seam and down another. I think my favorite outfit is a pair of overalls in denim, striped blue and white after an old-fashioned railroad conductor. She probably bought it because we’d taken a scenic trip by railway through parts of downtown Cleveland. When we walked up to JoAnn Fabric’s at the mall, we’d come home with zippers, buttons, elastic, fabric.

But those clothes I wore played second fiddle to my Mom’s truest talents: Christmas ornaments and Barbie doll clothes. When I wasn’t sucked too deeply into the story line of Doctor Who, lessons came one stitch at a time. I’d get to sewing my much simpler doll clothes, or my favorite: ornaments sparkling with sequins and seed beads. My go-to craft stores no longer exist, small mom-and-pop shops that existed in houses: Bette’s Beads & Boutique on Mentor Avenue, a few minutes by bike; and Strawberry Basket on Center Street a few blocks north of my elementary school.

wizard of oz felt ornaments

Wizard of Oz set from the seventies

First it was the felt kits by Darice, watching TV and cutting, stitching, beading. From the cats I learned the art of protecting the thread, the yarn, the beads. Rambunctious (Bunky for short), Ditto (he was a carbon copy of Bunky in appearance), Shalamar, each decided that the thread needed their tender, loving care more than mine. And by tender-loving, I mean claws fully extended, fur-flying fun-loving kitty care.

a painted glass ornament, a dragon, writing

Ornament by a writer friend who paints, under Foxy’s Art Box.

Whether I channeled magpies or mermaids, I loved shiny things, and I found the lure of ornaments a-glitter with sequins and seed beads impossible to resist. If we hadn’t had that cathedral ceiling, I don’t know how we would have housed the impressive collection of ornaments we Heinrich women cranked out. The diversity of our crafting still amazes me, augmented as it is from years of gifts by friends and family, plus my tendency to buy one or two ornaments a year from craft shows. One for 2016 is the literary dragon I commissioned from my writer friend Jennie, who runs Foxy’s Art Box.

When it came to crafting, Mom taught me two lessons that echoed Dad’s, not that they ever actually said this. Work until the job’s done, however many days or weeks that might take an hour here, an hour there. And, if you’re going to do, it you darn well better do it right, pouring your spirit into it, your passion.

ice cream cone ornament in felt

An early ornament

Each ornament served as a goal. Make this snow cone. Make that pair of ice skates out of the plastic canvas kit; or maybe the cute mailbox next. Did I love birds? Look at this adorable pattern in mom’s latest catalogue, cute bluebirds wearing scarves and Christmas hats. I saved the nickels and dimes from weekly chores, birthday money, and when I was older, the money from the Saturday job of cleaning Mrs. Sirl’s house, or working at Dad’s shop for a few hours. When the money didn’t go to books, it went to crafts.

Mom taught me to sew, but my creative sister Patti, ever the one to draw, taught me how to make patterns. A world opened. Did I find a picture of a set of ornaments, but liked only one of them? Or maybe I’d rather buy the next Trixie Beldon book, or the Three Investigators.

santa in a plane, felt ornament

An early knockoff, after Patti taught me to make my own patterns

At the kitchen table, Patti would show me how to sketch an idea, turning it into a pattern. With see-through onion paper, we’d trace out the individual pieces, and before I knew it, we’d be pinning our patterns to the felt and felt scraps, ready to cut. We saved every spare seed bead and sequin from our kits, then rounded out the specialty colors from Bette’s, Strawberry Basket, JoAnn’s, or mom’s own stash.

another ornament--an elf sitting in ring

Plastic canvas elf by my sister

We thrilled to the possibilities during the crafting heyday of the eighties, before cheap imports from overseas undercut our crafting.  We bought table space alongside our mom at the church and school craft shows. Our table held felt, plastic canvas, bread dough, or whatever craft we’d learned, and liked enough to produce extras to sell or give as gifts. I need to personally apologize to the friends, cousins, and aunts whose Christmas tree boughs bend beneath the weight of the bread dough ornaments I gave each year! Well, unless I came up with a special design—like the Star Trek Next Generation figures for my cousin Lynn, or Gandalf, Frodo, Legolas, and Aragorn for cousin Donna. I worked for pennies an hour, but it was pin money, allowing us to buy a few gifts at Christmas while our creative side came out. And learned to work. Through the night, even, when it came to tending twelve to eighteen bread dough ornaments that took all day to make, and six hours to bake with three turnings. That didn’t count the time to dip them in shellac, paint; dip; and dip again, until finally adding the glittery golden hanging cord.

tiny mouse ornament in felt

This mouse series is one of my favorites by my mom.

Each Christmas, I pull out these spirits of days past, present, future. All those hours Mom invested in teaching me to sew, do cross-stitch, plastic canvas. And my sister, teaching me the art of bread dough, forming an adorable ornament out of salt, flour, water, and acrylic paint mixed in.

Whether these were creative skills or practical, they stood us in good stead. They’re the skills and lessons that have gotten me where I am today, and I wouldn’t change it for the world.

Thanks, Mom. Thanks, Sis. You are the spirits of Christmas all the year through, and you continue to teach me. It’s not Christmas until our family ornaments hang from the tree, reflected in the soft glow of miniature lights.

 

Where does your Christmas spirit come from? Family? If you don’t celebrate Christmas, what holiday do you recognize as one year ends, and the next begins? Do you pull out a certain craft project every Christmas, the way I do? I’d love to hear your story.

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Book Review: A Promise of Fire

cover art of warrior woman with sword on fire

Cover Art from the book

A Promise of Fire, Amanda Bouchet (Sourcebooks Casablanca, August, 2016)

Book one of the Kingmaker Chronicles , 420 pp. At the time of this review (12/20/16), it holds a 4.6-star review on Amazon.

Romance, High Fantasy

From the jacket:

KINGDOMS WILL RISE AND FALL FOR HER… BUT NOT IF SHE CAN HELP IT

Catalia “Cat” Fisa lives disguised as a soothsayer in a traveling circus. She is perfectly content avoiding the danger and destiny the Gods-and her homicidal mother-have saddled her with. That is, until Griffin, an ambitious warlord from the magic-deprived south, fixes her with his steely gaze and upsets her illusion of safety forever.

Griffin knows Cat is the Kingmaker, the woman who divines the truth through lies. He wants her as a powerful weapon for his newly conquered realm-until he realizes he wants her for much more than her magic. Cat fights him at every turn, but Griffin’s fairness, loyalty, and smoldering advances make him increasingly hard to resist and leave her wondering if life really does have to be short, and lived alone.

Review

A Promise of fire is the debut novel by Amanda Bouchet. Cat would have been content living out her life in the circus, building a circle of friendships she never expected to have, but her sooth-saying act draws the attention of a warlord. Then one of the Greek Gods meddles: she knows better than to reveal secrets of her youth, yet when she reads the “future” of a young circus goer who desires the magic of the Magoi, she tells the boy where he might find a path to magic and gives away her first secret. The opening pages set the tone of the novel. Cat is hard on herself, protects herself, and runs from something she doesn’t ever want to face. Told in first-person present tense, the story invites you into every tormented discussion Cat has with herself about what she should or shouldn’t do. She’s protecting her heart, and you’ll have to read to find out why.

In the opening pages the warlord who watches her, Griffin, has the best interests of the kingdom in mind when he takes her away from her circus life, but he gives her no real choice when he presents his case to her. He’s a rare combination of intelligence, physical strength, and battle skills, making him a match for Cat and the survival skills she’s honed. And he’s ruthless when it comes to getting his way when he’s sure he knows best.

Bouchet did a fantastic job of dropping in the tidbits of Cat’s backstory as they were needed. For two reasons I’d be hard-pressed to say that she “info-dumped” anywhere: She built the perfect degree of mystery as Cat revealed those tidbits that explained her reactions, her fears, her abilities, letting the reader piece together the mystery long before Griffin does. Most times, I wanted more of that backstory, but the amount that Bouchet added didn’t interrupt the tension or the pacing of the story.

Her world-building is the same—she puts the information in scene, making me feel Cat drip with sweat in the desert setting, and long for the icy pools of her youth. The book balances descriptions of settings, characters, beasts, and enemies. I loved hearing character names I recognize from Greek mythology as Bouchet built the three major kingdoms I didn’t recognize (Sinta, Tarva, Fisa) and their power balances; then her original layer of Magoi (those with magic) and the Hoi Polloi (those without magic).

Cat speaks her mind regarding her predicament, every chance she gets, making her own case why Griffin is wrong. That provides fodder for the companions to lob back and forth as Bouchet develops the secondary characters—the warriors accompanying Griffin, building a company you can see, admire, and chastise for their role in Cat’s predicament. Bouchet made me care about them by showing me their interactions, their concerns, and hints of who they are as men and warriors. If anything, she made them a tad too nice, outside of their siding with Griffin over Cat. Everyone is single-mindedly convinced they know what’s right for her—and it is not fair to her. At all. As negative reviewers have said, these are the elements of rape culture. (I need this warning, so you can think about your sensitivities.)

If you love action along with your romance, you’ll fly through this book. Tension builds with each of the roadblocks and plot twists. Think about a few of the beasts from Greek mythology, then add in her version of a dragon, which I believe Bouchet created with the mythology as a base. The opportunities for battles abounded; and at each junction, Cat could make a choice to head back to her circus, support her friends, or turn on them. Those circus members mattered to me fast, too, because Bouchet showed me their magics, their acts, and how Cat interacted with them. I cared about them because she cared about them, dear as family.

With the first-person narration, the amount of “thinking” Cat does, you’re along for that ride as she battles who she is—from the days of her youth to the years of relative freedom she had with the circus, now stolen from her. She’s sharp-witted and emotionally honest with the readers, even when not with her companions. Cat feels like a reliable narrator. Once I know what she ran from, know her place in society, her behaviors make sense.

With a romance, well, sex is going to occur. Bouchet steams up the page as the longings grow between the characters. But even with those scenes, an emotional component keeps pace with the storyline. For a woman who expected to live her life alone, she’s got a lot of crap to get through. It makes the attraction easier to fight at times, but pushes her into fights with herself. She has to decide if it’s worth breaking free from the restrictions she’s placed upon herself.

Although the setting is ancient Greece, at times the language is modern. For example, one of Cat’s favorite expressions in her interior monologues is “gah!” which seems modern to me. Occasional other words jumped out at me. In the middle, “nerves” (I wondered when medicine came up with that) and towards the end, “tachycardia.” Then, the concept of “hours.” Sure, sun dials have been around forever, but that term? And “inches” as a measure. In the scheme of things, these were hiccups that did not cause me true grief; rather, as a writer pitching my own Greek mermaid story, they’re the same (potential) anachronisms I have to look up when it dawns one me I might have dropped in an anachronistic term when I didn’t mean to. I’m guessing most readers wouldn’t give any of them a second thought.

Cat made me laugh with her banter, her on-point observations, and some of the sillier battles with herself. With what Bouchet puts Cat through, she made me cry, cheer, cringe, and ultimately stay up later than I was supposed to one worknight. When Friday evening hit, I was staying up late until I finished the book, to the detriment of progress on the Christmas cards. I will have to read this book again. I stumbled on this book because I’d been doing my agent research, found the relatively new release by agent Jill Marsal, read a few of the “free” pages from Amazon, and then promptly hunted for the book at the library. I sat on the waiting list, then blazed through the book in a week—for me, that’s fast with everything else I normally do. Now that I’ve devoured the book, it goes into the “must add to my collection” list. Book two comes out January 3, 2017, with the third installment slated for fall of 2017.

Learn more about the next volume of Cat and Griffin’s story, A Breath of Fire, at the author’s webpage or the book page; or buy the book, as it contains the first chapter of A Breath of Fire. Find other reviews of A Promise of Fire at Amazon or your favorite book-review site. Find the author also on Facebook and Twitter.
This book has already stacked up the awards:

  • An Amazon Best Book of 2016!
  • A Kirkus Reviews Best Book of 2016!
  • An NPR Best Book of 2016!
  • An Amazon Best Book of the Month!
  • Additionally, before being published, the book won several Romance Writers of America chapter contests, including the Orange Rose Contest and the paranormal category of the prestigious Golden Pen

Wrapping it up

Have you read A Promise of Fire? What elements of it did you enjoy? Are you new to reading romances, like me, or have you been a long-time fan of the genre? What are some of the traits that call to you?

I’m always looking to find new authors in fantasy, and now paranormal romance or fantasy romance. If you’ve got a new book you’d recommend, add it to the comments. I thank you, and I’m sure my followers will thank you!

My book reviews also live on Amazon and Goodreads. If you found the review helpful, I’d appreciate a “like” or “it was helpful” tick-mark in whatever medium you visit.

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Mom, Dad, and Christmas Spirit

Mom and Dad have always embodied the Christmas spirit. They gifted us kids with things we needed, wanted, or would just die if we didn’t find under the tree. But that isn’t the Christmas spirit I mean. They shared Christmas spirit when they taught us kids to care for others, and to donate when we could.

50-piece plastic toy tool set

Oh, the things a child can imagine building.

What sits at the top of my mom’s Christmas list? “Donations to your charity of choice.” What sits at the bottom of my mom’s Christmas list? The same item! What’s at the top of mine? “Donate to the National MS Society,” followed by “Donate to your favorite charity.” Thanks to the work ethic my parents instilled in me, a solid education, working two jobs in the early years to pay off my loans, and a lot of good luck, I’m blessed to have the ability to donate and keep the Christmas spirit alive.

Photo of Shari with two boxed bikes. Photo by Bike Lady

Bike Lady stopped by my house the year I bought two bikes for her.

One of my favorite charities embodies the Christmas spirit year ’round on two wheels: Bike Lady. This charity exists because in 2008 one woman, Kate Koch, decided to buy a few bikes to give to Franklin County Children Services for their Holiday Wish program. That program exists solely on donations. But Kate didn’t stick with her plan. By the time she rolled through checkout, she’d purchased twenty-six bikes. As Kate walked past the other checkout aisles, a hush fell. Then the buzz began, seeking the story of one lady and twenty-six bikes. Before she’d left, Kate held money in her hand from other shoppers, telling her to buy more bikes. Bikes arrived on her doorstep; checks, in her mailbox.

Kate never meant to form a charity, but what could she do? She’d found a need; and the public had responded. Central Ohio bicycle groups jumped in with donations of their own. I belong to both Columbus Outdoor Pursuits and Westerville Bicycle Club, and know the generosity both have had over the years as they could afford it—COP, as much as $5,000 several years. I’ve donated to Bike Lady eight years running; Kate has become a friend. My Mom and Dad’s business, Dynamic Specialties, has donated the past few years as well—they know how important my bicycle has been in my health, my sense of adventure, my identity.

Through 2015, shining with the Christmas spirit, Bike Lady and all her generous donors have distributed 6,477 bicycles across 33 Ohio counties. With more than 5,500 children in the foster care system in Ohio, a lot of kids won’t receive anything at Christmas if the fostering family can’t afford it—because the foster care system itself cannot donate. Only through the Holiday Wish program will kids get something. Thank you, Bike Lady Kate Koch, for embodying that Christmas spirit. You get it when you say, “Like the season in which we give them, bikes are magical.”

Hot Wheels Track and Cars

I pair up toys, like a Hot Wheels track set and a car set, for hours of races

Long before my nephew served in the Marines, my family bought toys for the Toys for Tots campaign, or the FireFighters 4 Kids campaign if we could make that drop-off. The past three years, it’s been my own community’s FireFighters for Families Food and Toy Drive, helping out families at Christmas.

These days, Mom prefers I do the shopping. When her check arrives, I ante up my funds and get to shopping. The goal is cool toys, but always at 40%, 50% or 60% off; even better when I have a coupon from one of my favorite big-box stores, and can take another 20% or 30% off the total; or get “cash” coupons to use the following week. Before I know it, I’ve got a carload of gifts. But I’m not done.

books and matching stuffed animals

Books to build the mind and stuffed animals to love

Books. Books must always be part of the donation. Always, always, always and a day. I am who I am because of books; I am successful because of books; I’m creative because of books; I’m a writer because of books. I’d ask for, and receive, books at Christmas; and, and, and! The past few years, I’ve bought via the Kohls Cares for Kids campaign because the hardbound picture book is $5, and a matching stuffed animal is $5. Given my OCD nature, I can’t help but scoop up every pair, even when that puts me over budget.

True to their nature, Paddington Bear and Curious George made a break for it as we headed for the fire station door this morning. The grocery bag with those two devious critters mysteriously ripped, and the stuffed animals headed for the pavement. Curious it is, Curious George, how you managed to separate yourself from your book, though I’d tied them together with a ribbon. Sorry, Curious George, you’ll have to stay with your book until you’re in a child’s home, sharing the Christmas spirit. Then you can take your child on an adventure or two.

If I passed the Salvation Army kettle as a kid shopping at the Mentor Mall, I emptied my pocket of any coins and put them in the kettle. I think Mom created that tradition with her Christmas spirit. These days, if I don’t have pocket change, my rule is the lowest bill in my pocket. To my chagrin this year, I passed a kettle, and the only money I had was the twenty dollars I had just gotten as part of choosing cash back at checkout. Into the kettle it went.

Mom, Dad, and I share our Christmas spirit

Mom, Dad, and I share our Christmas spirit

I hold this Christmas spirit dear because of Mom and Dad’s generosity, their love, their sacrifices.

Do you have a tradition of giving tied to Christmas, or the holiday you share at this time of year? I’d love to hear about it.

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