Over the years I’ve collected many Christmas books. Anthologies of festive tales and poetry. I pile the books somewhere obvious at the beginning of each December - as a reminder to myself to steal an hour or two at some point during the seasonal mayhem, and snuggle down and disappear into the worlds the words conjure up.
This year I decided to share the pleasure. So I sent out invitations and planned to fill my sitting-room with friends of all ages, from small children to ladies in their 80s. And I planned that, by the light of many candles and to the soft background of tranquil carols, we would weave Christmas spells and scatter Christmas stardust. Everyone would bring an offering to read. We would hear festive stories, funny stories, fairy stories. We would read poems. We would tell Christmas jokes. And finally, we would retell the Christmas story itself.
I imagined a gentle evening, not a raucous one. An evening to settle deep into the magic of Christmas. An evening to be present. An evening to wonder. An evening, finally, to tumble out into the frosty night, full of mince pies and laughter and good cheer. To go home and dream Christmas dreams, while the stories still danced in our heads.
But then the snow came.
Our cottage became inaccessible, except to hardy souls prepared to trudge down a steep, snowy field in the dark. And to even reach the snowy field, they would have to negotiate the icy roads into the village.
And so the storytelling gathering was postponed till another year. Which means I’ll be curling up alone, as usual, to dip into the tomes full of memories and riches and quiet contemplation. But that’s no bad thing.
Then again, you could join me. Just take a book, a spare hour and pour yourself a glass of something seasonal. What’s your favourite Christmas story?