Yes, I know; I’m probably the five-millionth person to write
a blog post with this title today. Well, maybe not the cocoa part. ;)
Xocolatl is a Mayan inspired hot chocolate beverage with a
hint of cinnamon. Add milk and garnish with whipped cream. Um, yes,
please. Yum!
Although the cocoa is Mayan, my series takes place in
Russia, so I thought I’d share some Winter Solstice traditions from that part
of the world.
It’s on this longest night of the year in the Northern
Hemisphere that many of the rituals we now associate with Christmas originated.
Celebrations of light emerging from darkness were common among pagan religions.
In ancient Russia, Winter Solstice was the festival of Perun, the god of
thunder and lightning, and of high places.
According to the website Trans-SiberianExperience, “The
festivities for the Winter Solstice would have been led by Siberian shamans. They dressed
themselves in a special festive hooded warm winter gown, adorned with exotic
items. To work their magic, they would put themselves in a trance – in this
trance they would fly through the air, in a sleigh drawn by reindeer. To
celebrate the festival they would give attractive lucky charms to children, to
bring them good fortune in the year to come. Does that sound like
anyone we know?”
Perun, according to the same website, is the son of
Bielobog, god of light. On the Winter Solstice, Bielobog triumphs over
Chernobog, god of darkness, in their eternal battle. There’s some argument as
to whether these are two separate gods or two aspects of one god (or whether
these gods of duality are actually a modern construct and were never worshipped
at all), but the message remains the same—the ascendancy of light over the darkness
begins after the longest night of the year.
And in Russia, the longest night is seriously that. In St.
Petersburg, there are less than six hours of daylight today, while farther
north in Arkhangel’sk, it’s less than four. And if you aren’t lucky enough to
have a fire demon to keep you warm through the longest night like my character
Anazakia in The Fallen Queen, I’m
sure it will seem very long indeed.
But there’s something especially magical about the longest
night, wherever you happen to be, because we know the darkness has reached its
nadir and things can only get better from here. Which, after recent events here
in the US, I hope very much is true.
To enter my giveaway to win a copy of one of my Arkhangel’sk books and a cup of Mayan xocolatl to keep you warm while you read, see the Rafflecopter below. One winner will be chosen at random on Christmas Eve.
To enter my giveaway to win a copy of one of my Arkhangel’sk books and a cup of Mayan xocolatl to keep you warm while you read, see the Rafflecopter below. One winner will be chosen at random on Christmas Eve.
The House of Arkhangel'sk - A dark retelling of The Snow Queen, war in Heaven, and the last days of Imperial Russia. Epic fantasy with an urban twist.
I would go with The Fallen Queen since I'm new to the series. I would share the cocoa with my sister who is cocoa-obsessed.
ReplyDeleteI'd love a copy of The Fallen Queen as I've not read this series yet 0 it looks awesome. I'd share my cocoa with my dad. like me he loves all things chocolate.
ReplyDeleteI would like The Midnight Court because I am in the middle of reading The Fallen Queen.
ReplyDeleteI would share the cocoa with my hubby because he love cocoa. He loves it more than I do!
I would go with book 1 since I am new to the series. The cocoa I would share with my sister & nieces. (maybe, lol)
ReplyDeleteBook two, pretty please! I loved the first one.
ReplyDeleteI'm obligated to share any and all chocolatey goodness with my mother and nephew. I don't mind. They (usually) leave plenty for me.
I just realized the auto-tweet from Rafflecopter was sending out tweets for a different giveaway. Yikes! Sorry about that! If it lets you tweet again, it's been fixed. :}
ReplyDeleteCongratualtions to the winner of the End of the World giveaway, jyl22075! Thanks, everyone, for stopping by, and Merry Christmas! :)
ReplyDelete