Monday 31 December 2012

Scottish Hogmanay Traditions


In Scotland, New Year’s Eve is often more celebrated than in the rest of the UK, with the partying, drinking and dancing going on for several days. Edinburgh hosts the biggest street party in the world at this time. We call it Hogmanay and several traditions surround it even today. At one time, each housewife cleaned her home from top to bottom, ensuring we met the New Year as clean as possible. Although many of us don’t go to quite the same extremes now, we still do what we can. Having always lived near the River Clyde, we used to open the back doors at midnight to hear any ships on the river toot their horn to welcome the New Year.
One tradition that still thrives is the dancing. Many halls up and down the country host someone’s ceilidh, for our Scottish country dancing. The best have a live group with fiddles and accordion – the most toe-tapping sound you’re likely to hear all year! With energetic eightsome reels and dashing white sergeants, jigs and strathspeys, very few people sit still. And of course, most young men now wear the kilt even more than before, pleated tartan swinging at each turn. Enormous fun. For those at home, our television channels always bring us the evening’s entertainment from Glasgow or Edinburgh, with singing and Scottish dancing. As twelve o’clock approaches, the ‘bells’ are counted down until the stroke of midnight when we wish each other Happy New Year with a handshake, a kiss, and a toast.
But another old tradition must be observed if possible. Each home should have a ‘first footer’ – a tall, dark and handsome man as the first person to enter a house any time after midnight on Hogmanay. He should bring a lump of coal for luck (not so common now!) and some shortbread or cake. Anyone visiting homes over the New Year period will always take something for the host. And of course, it wouldn’t be Hogmanay without the necessary ‘wee dram’ of whisky to toast the New Year!
So I raise my virtual glass to wish everyone a happy, healthy and successful 2013.
Romy

Friday 21 December 2012

New Victorian Novella


As a slight change from the Regency period of my first novel, Dangerous Deceit, I've now published my first Victorian novella, Mischief at Mulbery Manor on Amazon kindle! Set around twelfth night in 1859, it's partly a Gothic romance, partly ghost story, culminating in the Twelfth Night Masked Ball.

Mischief at Mulberry Manor

When Maryanne Robertson visits her cousins’ old manor house for the Twelfth Night Masked Ball in 1859, she does not expect to find the manor haunted, or to fall in love. But mischief is afoot and one of her cousins is in danger, as frost covers the ground out of doors. Is the mischief caused by a ghostly presence or someone more human?
And here's the trailer I made!


And if that whets your appetite, it's now available from Amazon UK and Amazon US
Have a great Christmas,
Romy

Monday 17 December 2012

A Christmas Carol


One of the most classic Christmas stories of all time, A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens was published in December 1843 and has remained a firm favourite ever since. I love my little pocket edition of the complete novella which is red like the original. The great picture of a happy Victorian Christmas on the front of mine was used as the original frontispiece in the first edition.

Coming soon: I'm hoping to publish my new novella on Amazon kindle before Christmas. Mischief at Mulberry Manor is set in Victorian times around twelfth night and is a romance with a touch of ghost story! Details soon.

Romy