Introducing A Pioneer Christmas Collection!
When Barbour Publishing announced they were looking for novellas for A Pioneer Christmas Collection, they had just a few parameters: the story needed to take place between the 1700s to the late 1800s, have a pioneer experience, and celebrate Christmas in a unique dwelling.
The stories that appear in A Pioneer Christmas Collection certainly met that criterion.
Ranging in time slots from Shannon McNear’s lead-off Revolutionary War story, to Michelle Ule’s final tale of the 1897 Alaskan gold rush, the novellas sweep across North American locales both familiar and little known.
Shannon McNear portrays a surprising romance between a Tory militiaman hiding after a battle in which his side lost, and a young woman patriot in charge of her siblings when her father goes to fight in Defending Truth. “People were all just struggling to live their lives, and the politics were as upsetting and confusing as today.”
Celebrating Christmas in the cave where her hero was hiding, seemed a terrific idea, and certainly a unique one.
Kathleen Fuller has often driven past her setting for The Calling: the Unionville Tavern in northeast Ohio. “Once I found out the tavern was a stagecoach shop [in the early 19th century], I immediately came up with the idea of a traveler stopping at the tavern on a regular basis.” In The Calling, the traveler is a young man convinced he’s called to preach to those heading west, rather than the settled east. It’s the tavern keeper’s daughter who catches a vision of who he really is.
Have you ever spent Christmas in a tavern? Click to Tweet
Several writers deliberately sought often over-looked times and places. Anna Urquhart had seldom heard of pioneers traveling by water and examined the opening of the Erie Canal in the 1830’s which led to settlements in Michigan Territory. A Silent Night actually begins in Edinburgh, Scotland and follows the challenges of making a life in the big woods of the upper Midwest.
The drama of a marriage lost and found is played out over Christmas in a barn beside a smoldering cabin.
Pony Express Christmas by Margaret Brownley takes readers to a spot most of us think we know—or do we? When a vigorous young woman goes in search of her long-lost express-riding brother, she saves a man from outlaws and pays him to help her search. Set during the Civil War era, A Pony Express Christmas eventually takes us to Chimney Rock and an unusual holiday setting.
What happened to those Pony Express stopping stations and could they make an abandoned spot a holiday site? Click to Tweet
A Christmas Castle by Cynthia Hickey features a mail order bride who arrives in post-Civil War Arizona to discover her intended dead and a small child needing a mother. With outlaws trying to run her off her “inheritance,” she struggles with the help of a handsome neighbor to keep her land. Somehow she’s able to fashion a Christmas celebration in a virtual hole in the ground.
Who knew it could snow in Arizona in the winter? Have you ever had to cram a too-big Christmas tree into a too-small room? Click to Tweet
Lauraine Snelling returns to an area familiar to her readers in The Cowboy’s Angel, set in 1875 Dakota Territory. With her long-overdue husband miles away seeking supplies, a pregnant woman is forced to give birth with a stranger in attendance. Snow socked them into a half-built claim with the farm animals a thin wall away.
Using meager resources in a rough home, a woman finds cause to be thankful. How often have you had to “make do” for Christmas? Click to Tweet
Marcia Gruver takes us to sophisticated 1885 New York City in A Badlands Christmas, though we don’t stay there long. Inspired by the adventures of Theodore Roosevelt in the town of Medora, A Badlands Christmas shows the contrasts between festive scenes in the city and a Christmas spent in a dilapidated sod house in the middle of a brutal Dakota Territory winter..
While you may have dealt with the weather outside being frightful on December 25, were you half under the ground? Click to Tweet
Buckskin Bride by Vickie McDonough introduces us to a capable but desperate young woman who is more comfortable in buckskin than calico. She and her sisters are squatters on land the hero won in the 1889 Oklahoma land run. The handsome Irish landowner is kind but dare she trust him when her father warned her to avoid all men? With Christmas approaching, her father missing, and young sister injured, will she and her sisters spend Christmas alone in their tipi?
Have you ever spent Christmas in a tent, much less a tipi? Click to Tweet
In The Gold Rush Christmas, Michelle Ule takes a pair of twins and the boy-nextdoor to 1897 Skagway, Alaska where they meant to enjoy the season in the newly-constructed Union Church. Searching for a missionary father, however, lands them in a Tlingit cedar-planked long house for a lesson in how to present the gospel in a unique way anyone could understand.
Who can beat salmon for Christmas dinner, even if eaten off a plank? Click to Tweet
Interested in Christmas spent in novel ways, surprising settings, heroes and heroines filled with love and pluck? Why not try the nine stories found in A Pioneer Christmas Collection?
Shannon McNear says
Michelle, thanks so much for taking the time to write up this wonderful piece! And to your talented daughter for the graphics and table.
Just a note about schedule–I’m actually at my own blog on Saturday the 24th, and Vickie will be my guest on Wednesday the 28th.
I’m so excited to be in this with y’all, and nervous about leading off the collection–my debut! yikes!! The pressure is on. 🙂
Lori Benton says
I’m looking forward to this whole collection, Michelle. And I understand that pressure. I wish I could say it lets up the second time around. We do the best we can and then give it to God, right? That sometimes has to happen several times a day, that giving it to God part. At least for me, with my tendency to snatch it back. 🙂
Lori Benton says
That part about the pressure was me responding to Shannon’s comment. I’m also just up from a nap and have sleepy fingers.
Shannon McNear says
😀 Yep, a daily exercise in trust …