I've come over all Christmasy... - Mari Biella
It’s (almost) that time of
year again, when the entire Western world embarks upon a huge sweaty orgy of
buying and selling, and we all demand to have our stockings well and truly
stuffed. When having fun is mandatory, and rapidly-sobering revellers are admitted
to A&E Departments after attempting injudiciously ambitious dance moves at
office parties. It’s...
No, wait! There’s no way I
can say it as well as this gentleman:
Let the Festive foolishness
begin!
I try to hate Christmas, I
really do. I fulminate against the crass commercialism of it all, at the way a
jolly Midwinter festival has been hijacked by the crazed forces of global
hyper-Capitalism. But the moment I see a twinkly Christmas tree or hear the
strains of Jingle Bell Rock, all is
in vain. Sooner or later, my inner Scrooge always gets socked in the mouth by
my inner six-year-old.
He's not going down without a fight, though... |
Someone – it might have
been my inner six-year-old, come to think of it – once told me that I really
ought to lighten up a bit. I was outraged for a moment, but then I found myself
wondering if that person might have had a point. Is a little bit of fun and
frivolity really so bad? Do we have to take things obsessively seriously all
the bleedin’ time?
In fiction, let it be said,
I tend to wander around somewhere on the dark side. Not on the really dark side, just in a sort of
murky, foggy zone where there are no real heroes or villains, and where
everyone and everything is sort of ambiguous. This fits in with my experience
of the world so far. I’m convinced that there really aren’t many people out
there who are either truly good or truly bad. In my experience, people are
truly complicated. The same person can be both kind and cruel, sometimes
simultaneously.
Sometimes, I wander out of
that zone, and shuffle forward, blinking, into the light. Not radiant,
uncomplicated light, exactly – that would shrivel my gothic heart and strike me
dead – but into a world where most people, though still ambiguous, are rather
more kind than cruel. It’s a world where not everyone is hiding some hideous
secret (though some people are), and people at least attempt to get along. A
world where Christmas can truly be a time of great peace and joy, at least as
soon as you’ve escaped from the maniac who was trying to kill you...
That last bit probably
doesn’t make much sense to you. It soon may, at least if you follow me to the
end of this post. If the preceding paragraph has induced a bout of Exorcist-style
projectile vomiting in you, on the other hand, it’s probably better for your
own sanity if you don’t read any further. A little musical interlude follows,
to allow you time to run screaming from this post.
Still here? Well, you have
been warned. Let us proceed.
I’ve written a book, you
see. Nothing odd about that, since writing books, or at least attempting to
write them, is what it’s all about in my world. Most of those books, let it be
said, never make it out into the big wide world; they either die prematurely or
are strangled at birth, usually as an act of mercy. Every so often, though, one
of them manages to escape, which is just what this 'ere book has done.
And here it is. |
Perhaps I just overlooked
it. It’s a slender little book, a mere 32,000 words or so. And it’s fun (well,
I think it is, anyway). It’s not really that serious. It’s The Famous Five
for grown-ups. Yup, it’s like Anne from the Famous Five grew up, got married,
got divorced, took up journalism and got into a hair-raising adventure as a
result of her tiresome busybody snooping determined quest for the truth.
Make of that what you will. Some of you may be itching to slap me. Sorry.
Anyway, it being Christmas
(almost) I’m running a special offer. If you fancy reading The Famous Five for grown-ups – think Five Have a Jolly Spine-chilling Christmas
and you’re getting close – Wintergreen is currently available on Amazon, free for Kindle Unlimited subscribers and 99c/99p to buy. Or I can send out review copies to anyone who fancies one and is willing to put together an honest write-up for Amazon and/or Goodreads: please send me an email at mari.biella@gmail.com.
In any case, have a very Merry
Christmas, and a prosperous New Year!
Comments
1) Order
2) Read
3)...er, what's the third? :)
Other Xmasy reading which might interest AE'ers is over at McStorytellers. There's a daily 'Advent' calendar - open a different door each day for a different memory from the pen of Kirsty Eccles (catch up quick as I think she's about at the age 6 now and it will get a lot, lot darker!) and also there's a great McCompetition which should sort out the well read from the not so well-read - and give you a chance to see how well you can gauge 'style'. All free and all short form to fit into busy lives... enjoy!
http://www.mcstorytellers.com/mcblog
(And I'm still not a robot - that I know of. but I can thoroughly recommend fellow ex AE'er Rosalie Warren's recent book 'Lena's Nest' for anyone looking for a 'beyond' sci fi experience!