DEBORAH CROMBIE: I adore Paula Munier's Mercy Carr books when they are set any time of the year, but Christmas, and Christmas in snowy Vermont, is the icing on the Buche de Noel!! And if a new adventure featuring Mercy and Troy with their search and rescue dogs Elvis and Susie doesn't get you in the mood to curl up by the fire with a cup of hot chocolate, Paula has a few more suggestions to get you in the mood!
Winter Solstice
“You can’t get too much winter in the winter.”
— Robert Frost
Winter is my favorite season. I love everything about it: the snow, the soup, and most important, reading and writing snuggled up with a cat and a dog (or two or three or four) by the fire. That’s why, for me, the Winter Solstice is a very important holiday.
So important that in my latest Mercy Carr mystery, THE SNOW LIES DEEP, the Winter Solstice plays a big role, as do the Druids who observe the longest night of the year in a grand way in this story. And while I’m no Druid—fond as I am of trees—I do honor the solstice in my own way. I thought I’d share some of those ways with you.
Some of these may seem surprisingly familiar to you, since the winter solstice was the precursor to many of our modern-day holiday traditions. Pagan peoples of old welcomed the turning point that was the winter solstice, with its promise of longer, warmer, more sunlit days to come. They celebrated the return of the sun by burning Yule logs, lighting bonfires, decorating with evergreens and mistletoe, singing and drumming and feasting. I know, very familiar, right?
Perhaps we are all pagans at heart. But no matter what your tradition or how you typically celebrate this time of year—Christmas, Hanukkah, Kwanzaa, New Year’s, etc.—you might enjoy incorporating some of these Winter Solstice customs into your holiday season this year (if you don’t already):
Go for the Light. The winter solstice is all about the light in the darkness, so anything that represents that light is apropos:
--Yule log. Burn a Yule log in your fireplace or outdoor fire pit for the twelve days between the Winter Solstice and New Year’s as is the tradition—or whenever you wish. The kind of log is up to you: The English Druids use oak, the Scottish Druids prefer birch, and the French Druids like cherry, with a little wine sprinkled on top because, well, they’re French.
--Bonfire. Traditionally, bonfires were lit from sunset to sunrise on the night of the Winter Solstice to welcome the sun. you can burn yours—safely—any time. All you need is wood, family and friends, and maybe a guitar. I’m just saying.
--Ice Lantern. Lanterns of any kind are good ways to honor the solstice, but if you’re looking for a fun crafty activity to do with your kids or grandkids, making ice lanterns fits the bill. There are a number of how-tos on YouTube; researching different methods is half the fun. Note: If you live where it’s warm in the winter, you can freeze the water in your freezer in plastic tubs. Let there be light!
--Candles. Advent candles, Menorah candles, Kinara candles…whatever warms your heart and soul. Any and all candles brighten the gloom on a winter’s day. Enjoy!
Mistletoe. If you’ve never hung mistletoe, now’s the time. Mistletoe has always been sacred to the Druids because it grows on trees—and even while trees go dormant in the winter, mistletoe does not. Its host trees are “dead,” but the parasitic plant grows on, despite the cold and lack of sunlight. We’re talking a symbol of fertility here. Which leads us to kissing. Kissing is good.
Evergreen. Wreaths, garlands, centerpieces—however you decorate with pine or spruce or fir, you’re participating in an age-old tradition that honors the trees that survive the winter with strength and resilience and vibrancy. Go for it!
Nature Tree. Adorn a living pine or spruce or fir in your garden or the nearby woods with unsalted popcorn, fresh cranberries, and dried fruit. Be sure to use sturdy string, and do not use fishing line, which can harm birds. Note: If you live in bear country, skip this—and stick to planting native plants that attract birds and other pollinators.
Bûche De Noël. This is the traditional Yule log dessert. Mercy Carr’s grandmother Patience bakes one in THE SNOW LIES DEEP—a homemade chocolate sponge cake with cocoa hazelnut whipped cream rolled it into a log, with a chocolate ganache icing topped with fresh sprigs of rosemary and sugared cranberries. Not exactly easy, but here’s a recipe from the kitchn that tries to streamline the process.
What are your holiday traditions that echo back to the Winter Solstice? Let’s chat about it here on Jungle Reds! Here’s to a lovely holiday season for us all—and the coming of the light!
It’s December in Vermont—and Mercy is determined to give her baby Felicity the very best first Christmas ever. Starting with a visit to see Santa at Northshire’s annual Solstice Soirée. But when Santa abandons his post and runs into the woods, Mercy and Elvis go after him—and the shepherd finds the jolly old elf flat on his back in a small clearing, dead, a Yule log ablaze on his belly.
Mercy wants nothing more than to stay at home at Grackle Tree Farm taking care of Felicity, but as this St. Nick is really “Uncle” Lazlo, her family presses her to help solve their old friend’s murder and save the Solstice Soirée. She demures, but when another Santa ends up dead and the bones of a long-missing trapper turn up in the woods, Mercy and Troy and the dogs team up with Thrasher and Harrington to rid Northshire of the bad elements ruining the holidays for their town and their family.
Together they chase down clues leading to poachers and endangered lynx, evangelical zealots and Russian emigrés, and the terrible secrets haunting the village, past, present, and future. It’s not just Santa at risk, it’s everyone in town—including baby Felicity. It’s up to Mercy and Troy and the dogs capture The Yuletide Killer before he strikes again, this time far closer to home.
PAULA MUNIER is the Senior Agent and Director of Storytelling for Talcott Notch Literary and the USA TODAY bestselling author of the Mercy Carr mysteries. A Borrowing of Bones, the first in the series, was nominated for the Mary Higgins Clark Award and named the Dogwise Book of the Year. Blind Search also won a Dogwise Award. The Hiding Place and The Wedding Plot both appeared on several “Best Of” lists. Home at Night was named Library Journal’s Mystery Pick of the Month. The Night Woods, the sixth book in the series, earned a starred Library Journal review among other acclaim. THE SNOW LIES DEEP debuts in December 2025. Along with her love of nature, Paula credits the hero dogs of Mission K9 Rescue, her own rescue animals, and a deep affection for New England as her series’ major influences. She’s also written three popular books on writing: Plot Perfect, The Writer’s Guide to Beginnings, and Writing with Quiet Hands, as well as Happier Every Day and the memoir Fixing Freddie: The True Story of a Boy, a Mom, and a Very, Very Bad Beagle. She lives in New England with her family and four rescue dogs and Ursula The Cat, a rescue torbie tabby who does not think much of the dogs. For more, check out www.paulamunier.com.
DEBS: Paula, I thought you might get a kick out my daughter's Instagram post on Monday!
Because of course she is a big fan, too!














Congratulations, Paula, on your newest Mercy Carr book . . . they're always a treat and this one's on my teetering to-be-read pile . . . .
ReplyDeleteHere, Advent candles, Christmas trees, wreaths, and mistletoe are all part of this season of celebration . . . .
Aww thank you! So much fun to write a holiday story! Your house sounds like it’s full of holiday cheer! I’m behind on my decorating so I am trying to catch up!
DeletePaula, congratulations on your new book. I am currently reading and marking up your WRITER'S GUIDE TO BEGINNINGS, and it's fabulous, even more eye-opening than PLOT PERFECT, which I also own. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteOur boarding school had a tradition of chocolate Yule logs at the holiday. The youngest child at each table of six students (assorted ages, family style) had the responsibility for carrying it in. It was a great ceremony for forty years. My husband would be delighted if I made one. Hmmm. Cooking for me is only a duty, but I do love a surprise. Maybe some day! (Selden)
Oooh what a fun tradition! I think making that cake sounds fabulous— and you may have inspired me to do the same. I’m not much of a baker (I’d rather cook than bake), but we’ll see if I can pull it off.
DeleteI’ve seen this method of making the Yule log cakes using Ho Hos or Little Debbie Swiss Cake Rolls and decorating them.
ReplyDeletehttps://youtu.be/m1pwKWeaQI8?si=LGZJf-lFRmtLBcE5
These short days do make me want to go to bed early with a good book like yours, but I do look forward to the Winter Solstice as it marks the beginning of more daylight hours.
Oh oh my goodness my mother loves Little Debbie’s. (She’s 90 and would live on Little Debbie’s if I let her.) I will have to find a way to make that. Thanks so much for the tip!
DeleteHaving grown up being teased as "Little Debbie" they are not high on my favorites list!
DeleteHa! Polly want a cracker??!!??
DeleteMy mother loved the Little Debbie Oatmeal Pies. She would pull out the box and tell my kids, “I baked for you.” One year my youngest son, who was a teenager, gave her a cookie sheet with the individually wrapped oatmeal pies taped to it for Christmas. Good times that I miss.
DeleteHa! That’s great. During the pandemic, we couldn’t get a Little Debbie’s and I had to bake three cakes a week to keep her sweet tooth satisfied.
Deletewelcome Paula! I'm just starting your book and it's the perfect time to be reading it even though we don't have a lick of snow. You are one of the few people I know who loves winter best!
ReplyDeleteHa! Well, if I lived in Key West, maybe I wouldn’t miss snow at all LOL
DeleteI know, Lucy! I read it several months ago and now want to read it again "in season."
DeleteI'm mid-way through The Snow Lies Deep - thanks for featuring this series. I love it!
ReplyDeleteAwww thank you so much! I love writing the books and so I’m thrilled when Readers like you like them. Happy holidays!
DeleteCongratulations on your recently released book. As you know Mercy Carr is one of my favorite series. We don't have any winter solstice celebration. Oh we did watch the yule log burning on the tv.
ReplyDeleteDru! Merry Christmas! I hope you have a lovely holiday season, Yule log or no Yule log ❤️❤️❤️
DeleteCongrats Paula on the new release!
ReplyDeleteAs you mention, many current practices have their roots in Solstice celebration. My Advent wreath is up and I light candles each week. I also like to keep the 12 days between Christmas and Epiphany. My mom always got us more presents for Epiphany and we had cake with dimes or beans baked into it--whoever got the dime got to be one of the three kings.
We frequently enjoy the Revels performances, which are based around different folk traditions and music and they always end with the poem The Shortest Day from Susan Cooper and the call to "Welcome Yule!"
I love that Epiphany tradition! Thanks for telling me about it. It reminds me of the king cakes in New Orleans, where a little baby doll is cooked into the cake. And whoever gets the baby has to buy the next king cake. Leave it to New Orleans to keep the cakes coming!
DeleteLa Rosca de Reyes is the similar Mexican tradition. If you get the plastic baby, you have to make tamales for Candlemas.
DeleteReading Susan Cooper's The Shortest Day is a tradition I'd like to adopt!
DeleteTamales! Now there’s a tradition I could totally embrace!
DeleteCongrats on the new book! Christmas tree, of course, and I usually have a spruce or cedar-scented candle burning when I can.
ReplyDeleteThat’s the glory of candles. Not that they look pretty, but that they smell even better. I always try to weaving the scent of pine and earth and fresh air of the forest into my stories. And nice to bring it inside too!
DeleteI highly, highly recommend two candles from a company called Mersea: Sea Pines, which is the most perfect Christmas evergreen scent, and Snow Cypress, which smells to me like snow and a cold winter day.
DeleteOooh Snow Cypress! Sign me up!
DeleteI love the wooden wick kind - they really do snap and pop!
DeletePaula, you are a lady after my own heart! Winter is my favorite season and I get to soak it all in living near the White Mountains in Maine (the White Mountain range is actually in New Hampshire but we can see them from where we live and the range continues here into Maine), so we get plenty of snowy days (which I am happy about). I love the coziness of winter (as an introvert, I find summer to be a little too… summery (why does it have to get so hot?). We do most of the solstice rituals you have listed, but my main focus in the winter is providing a little quality of life and ease for the animals who are trying to survive our long winters. I provide some food and water for them and it’s a daily job! They all make the rounds in our area as there are other animal lovers who provide sustenance to them as well. For myself, this is the season of hibernating (with a few outside activities-chorus, art & music classes), and I enjoy it very much. We also ski (alpine and XC) and that helps to enjoy the weather. I figure that if we are going to live in a 4-season part of the earth, we may as well embrace it rather than feel miserable for 1/2 of the year. Wishing you all a wonderful season!
ReplyDeleteI live in New Hampshire (not far from the Vermont border), so I love the White Mountains as well as the Green Mountains of Vermont. I used to ski, which is such great fun but now I just mostly tramp around in the snow with the dogs. We have a Newfoundland and she especially likes nothing better than the frolic in the snow. I totally agree that the glory of living in New England is the four seasons, each so different one from the other. And I try to make the most of that in my stories. Setting each book in a different season, including mud season LOL
Delete40 years of trying to embrace winter in Minnesota was enough. Living in Florida and loving it!
DeleteHa! Enjoy all that sunshine and warmth!
DeletePaula ~ Your comments and suggestions just brought me such a feeling of joy and celebration on this overcast day that I topped my hot morning coffee off with a dollop of whipped cream. :-) My childhood best friend is and always has been a huge fan of the winter solstice. I look forward to her annual winter solstice check-in letter each year, brilliantly timed when one needs a boost, and her clever and creative way of welcoming the light back into this time of the year. I love all your ideas and we here in our household adhere to celebrating light (all year round) with seasonal candles, outdoor lanterns and keeping lights on our indoor Manzanita branches. I am especially fond of wreaths; they grace our front and back doors as well as our dining room mirrors. I change them out seasonally. Lambs ear wreaths are my choice for the spring and summer and bronze magnolia wreaths are hung in the fall and winter. The magnolia wreaths get an extra punch of holiday celebration with cranberry or tartan plaid color bows. And our Christmas tree (or winter solstice for others) always has a train set circling its base. Tis the season! Congratulations on your latest Mercy Carr Mystery "The Snow Lies Deep"!
ReplyDeleteEverything goes better with whipped cream! And this time of year topping everything with whipped cream is practically obligatory. Enjoy! I love the idea of swapping out wreaths all year around. I’m gonna have to find myself one of those lambs ear wreaths, that sounds perfectly beautiful! Happy holidays!
DeleteCongratulations, Paula! Looks like I've got some catching up to do with Mercy and Elvis. My tree has been up since the night before Thanksgiving and will stay in place until after the New Year. No decorations (rascally cat in residence!), but it's the lights I enjoy the most. And the semblance of bringing the 'forest' inside (artificial tree).
ReplyDeleteOh wow, I admire your ability to get Christmas going the weekend after Thanksgiving. I am behind this year, we always have one real tree from a local Tree Farm and an artificial tree, which I got last year for my granddaughters. I called the Barbie tree. And truth be told I never took it down.
DeleteDebs! Thank you and all the Jungle Reds for having me on during this very special time of year—and thank you to your daughter as well! I know your house must be absolutely beautiful during the holidays….
ReplyDeleteAlways such a pleasure to have you, Paula, and thank you--except that we are so behind this year and we haven't done a single Christmas thing! I usually try to get the tree (fresh) up by the 6th but so far nothing is going to plan.
DeleteNeither have I. Race you to the finish line!.
DeleteI'm excited for the new book, Paula - congratulations! I've loved the Solstice for a long time. I got the electric candles into the windows of my antique home last week. The fresh-cut tree comes soon, and the irreverent creche. Buche de Noel? Nah - made one once with my son. It was complicated, ugly, and too sweet LOL. I'll stick with baking from my grandmothers' cookie recipes.
ReplyDeleteHa! It is complicated, but that one with the Little Debbie’s cakes might be doable. And nothing is too sweet for my 90 year-old mother LOL happy holidays!!
DeleteI’m gonna try that Little Debbie’s Bûche De Noël, I’ll let you know how it turns out.
DeleteMorning All ~ Paula B here ~ I just started your latest this morning. Awesomely wonderful. She’s a woman after my own heart in that her special place is home with her family. So, Paula, how do you pronounce your last name, the Munier one? Is it your pen name? Discussions abound when purchasing one of your books regarding the pronunciation. Christmas in the desert is different. My first Christmas here I was amazed I could buy a Christmas Tree and petunias at the same time. Snow up north but not down here. Tradition, for me, is people. People seem to stop the crazy long enough to reconnect with friends. Have you ever seen a lighted/decorated Saguaro cactus? There’s a company here that does that. Barbara from Poisoned Pen in Scottsdale has her’s decorated every year. It’s stunning.
ReplyDeleteSo you pronounced my name munYAY! Thank you for asking. I always was the new kid at school, an army Brat who went to 12 schools in 11 years, and there was always some kid in the back who called me “manure.” Until I moved to New Orleans and went to a girl schools there where they could pronounce French words properly. Needless to say, I love New Orleans!
DeleteAs for saguaro cactus and Barbara Peters, everything the woman does is perfect. Sigh….
Congratulations on the new Mercy Carr book! I'm somewhat impatiently waiting for my turn on the library hold list. As for Winter Solstice, I will admit that to me it means the days will start getting longer a minute or two at a time. I am solar powered and lost without my sunshine. -- Victoria
ReplyDeleteThank you and thank your library! God bless libraries in librarians and readers like you! Happy winter solstice!
DeleteYaayyy welcome! You know how much I love you, and Mercy— And I don’t know how you do it all! What on earth is an ice candle?
ReplyDeleteClick on the how-to link in the post, Hank! I had no idea either, but they are so fun! Maybe if we have really cold spell this winter I will try it.
DeleteOh Hank, they are candles made out of ice, you can make some in your spare time LOL
DeleteBut seriously, they are beautiful!
I am a weirdo and love the short days! When you live in Texas cozy evenings are a blessing.
ReplyDeleteI hear you. I live in New England and I still love Winter because summer wears me out. If I lived in Texas, I would be exhausted all the time.
DeletePaula, I am a huge fan of the series and looking forward to reading your new book. I love how Mercy has healed and grown since the first book and Troy is on my list of hunky book boyfriends. Just saying.
ReplyDeleteI love winter, too. I grew up in Connecticut and have great memories of snow days sledding with my brother and my cousins.
Have a lovely holiday season!
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DeleteSledding is so much fun. I used to love it as a kid and we do it on our hill with our granddaughters now. Yes, Troy is a hunk. My books are full of hunks. And strong women. As the world should be!
https://www.instructables.com/Ice-Candles-Using-Ice-in-Candle-Making/
ReplyDeleteHank asked about Ice Candles earlier. Is this what they are talking about?
You put a candle in a cleaned out milk carton (with top cut off - making it into a long box shape).
Put a candle in the middle, fill the carton with ice cubes so they surround the candle.
Pour melted wax into the carton over the ice.
Peel back the milk carton.
I just read the instructions quickly so it is more or less like I've written :) :)
This isn’t the same thing as Paula was referring to, but you brought back memories to me. We used to make candles like that when I was a kid. I think we used melted crayons because I remember them being very colorful (and my mom was probably trying to get us to use up our little pieces of crayons!). — Pat S
DeleteYes, we used to make those candles when I was a kid too. That’s a little different although it’s fun. Ice candles are literally made with ice, you freeze the water in a bucket or a can with a hole in the middle to leave room for a candle and then light it and put it outside…..
DeleteSo think of it as a luminary with a chunk of hollowed out ice in place of the paper bag.
DeleteExactly, it’s a luminary made out of ice!
DeleteWelcome to jungle reds and congratulations on your new Mercy Carr novel. Perfect timing for Christmas gifting.
ReplyDeleteWe have many wonderful Christmas traditions. Lentil soup, leek and potato soup and other wonderful soups for the chilly weather. Opening the advent calendar every morning. Decorating the Christmas tree and decorating our rooms. The Icelandic Christmas tradition of book flood - book gifts on Christmas Eve. Gingerbread cookies. Nutcracker tea. Peppermint cocoa with marshmallows. Family get togethers. Hosting friends. Singing Christmas songs in sign language. Writing and sending Christmas cards. Knitting scarves.
Food! Food! Food! I just love all the soups, especially lentil soup. I make lots of soup in the winter. It’s just the best. I love the idea of learning sign language for Christmas carols. I may have to do that with my granddaughter. Thank you and happy holidays!
DeletePaula, My husband and I have been reading this series since the first one. Happy to see a new one and are on reserve at the library. Marjorie
ReplyDeleteYay yay yay! Happy holidays to you and your husband!
DeleteI just finished your new book and loved it. I've loved every book in this series. I can't wait for the next one. There is a next one, right? I really hope so. :-)
ReplyDeleteMy traditions and practices have been changing these past couple of years since my mothers death. So much of what I did involved her and trying to help her spend her Advent and Christmas seasons as she liked them. Now, I travel to my sister's home every other year so putting up even my small, artificial tree seems wasteful since I won't be home to enjoy it. Of course dealing with that bug I had, hasn't helped my mood this year. Today I think I'll find a nice poinsettia and new candles today.
Just when I needed a good book to cozy up with--Congrats and thanks for providing this winter treat! As for traditions, ours seem to be bending a little as our family gets older. One that never changes is the Light Festival and countdown which kicks off the town festivities the day after Thanksgiving. For some reason it's always really really cold and oh so magical.
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DeleteI totally hear you. My grandkids live in Europe and none of my kids are coming home this year so it’s just me and my mother and my husband and that’s a little depressing, but I’m going to make the most of it, which may mean lots of Olde New England eggnog and fudge. Whatever works. Happy holidays.!
DeleteAnd nothing like lights, lights, lights, lights! Here in New England, everybofy put lights on their houses and lights in their windows and with the long dark days it’s really quite lovely.
DeleteSo nice to see you here, Paula! I just checked and I am caught up on your series so can dive right into The Snow Lies Deep!
ReplyDeleteLiving in Southern California, we don’t do the cold weather things like many people have mentioned. But we have our outdoor decorations up and the Christmas tree is here, just not yet up and decorated. You have made me think about getting some candles going. I’m always up for baking and soup making. And despite our 80+ degree weather this week (yuck), it does cool off at night so a nice cup of tea or a glass of nog feels cozy. I always look forward to the Winter Solstice because I like more (natural) light in my days. Happy holidays to everyone! — Pat S
I lived in Northern California for nearly 20 years and on the Central Coast fog took the place of snow. It’s really just as beautiful in its own way. Have a wonderful Christmas and go crazy with the candles!
DeleteAfter reading The Snow Lies Deep I want to go to a winter solstice celebration!
ReplyDeleteJust find your local Wiccans or Druids or New Agers and there should be one! Have fun!
DeleteWhat fun ideas today, thanks, Paula!
ReplyDeleteLooking forward to the newest Mercy Carr, too! Happy holidays.
Thanks so much! I hope you enjoy the book, and have a wonderful holiday season!
ReplyDeleteA new Mercy Carr!!! Now I’m ready for the holiday season!
ReplyDelete