Saturday, December 5, 2020

Changes In Publishing 2020 - 2021 by Maggie Lynch

Wow! 2020 has been quite a year. I’ve heard from authors who have had their most successful year ever because of the pandemic and people reading more. I’ve also heard from authors who have had the worst year ever because of the pandemic and people reading less. 

How can they both be right? Genre, distribution, types of books they distribute (ebook, print book, audiobook). The one thing I know about publishing is that it is not even across genre and product type. Even if everything else is equal, genre definitely has its ups and downs based on what is happening the real world.

As I gathered my research for predicting changes in publishing for 2021, I realized that data on the impact of the pandemic is limited. Most of the reporting I could find reflected only through May. This is typical as statistical analysis is time consuming and relies on reporting from many entities. Because we haven’t had this kind of pandemic for a century and comparing publishing statistics from 1920 to now would be ridiculous. But the data we do have is pretty remarkable. 

My predictions are based on a review of both 2019 data and early 2020 data. The good news is that indie authors will likely receive the most rewards from the changes in publishing—moving primarily to digital media during the pandemic. How long that will last will depend on how or if traditional publishers will adapt their pricing and availability to compete better in the digital market.

As always there is more to report than page space. I’ve narrowed them to four big changes: 1) the impact of the pandemic on book products; 2) the rise in sales of subscription services across the board; 3) International sales expanding at a higher rate than U.S. sales; and 4) Artificial Intelligence (AI) continues to make a major difference in 2021.

Pandemic Impacts

While millions of people have been limited to their homes and economies faced a major downturn, each person has been looking to kill boredom. For those that aren’t spending ten hours a day on social media, they had to turn to something else. For some that means streaming Netflix or Prime Video. For others it is listening to audio. For many it has been reading. Even though book readers may have preferred print, they found it hard to come by with bookstores closed and even Amazon delivery of print books delayed when they put delivery of “essential products” first. In the case of bestselling books, people often waited more than a month to get the book delivered.

That boredom was instead cured by ebooks and audiobooks that were easily downloaded to phones, tablets, and sometimes desktop computers. I believe the pandemic has advanced the uptake of digital media by at least five years. 

As of May 2020 the Association of American Publishers (AAP) reported revenues for hardbacks down 18.5%, and paperbacks down 16.9% on a year to date basis. On the bright side ebook and audiobook revenue was up. Ebooks up by 39.2%, and audiobooks up by 22%. Again, these were comparisons to the same period in 2019.

Audiobooks continue to be a double-digit revenue generator year over year. As of May 2020, audiobook sales were up 27% compared to the same time last year. Who are these audiobook listeners it seems that the majority of them (57%) are under the age of forty-five. Edison Research national survey of American audiobook listeners ages 18 and up all increased their listening in terms of the. Number of audiobooks. The most popular audiobook genres continue to be mystery/thriller/suspense.  

A 2019 survey by Edison Research reported that half of all Americans over the age of 12 listened to an audio book in the past year. Fifty percent of the listeners were below the age of 45. The average number of audiobooks listened to in a year was eleven.  That is higher than the average number of print books or ebooks read in the U.S. which was six and four respectively. 

Libraries have also been a major part of ebook and audiobook purchases during the pandemic. As they closed their doors many libraries changed their budgets to allow more digital download media to be purchased, and that meant decreasing the budget for print. Some very large systems were already undertaking a major overhaul of library space in light of more digital collections, now using the space for artisan showings and things other than books that could be borrowed—including a variety of recorders, power tools, museum or park passes, musical instruments, and many more. 

Though many people my age (baby boomers) are reluctant to give up print, once they have downloaded three or four ebooks or audiobooks they are quickly hooked on the ease of access as well as the significantly reduced price (except for bestsellers). In addition, the younger generation—those under 40 years old—grew up in a digital world and the majority were never attached to print books. Do you remember the rise of Wattpad? A free writing and reading platform that used to be the indie bestseller creator? Most of that group is hitting 30 years old now. They learned to read online and have been among the major  consumers of ebooks and audiobooks. Given the movement toward climate and resource conservation, I really don’t see print books remaining except as unique collections of antiques or very special books. 

Subscription Services Dominate Sales Worldwide 

Subscription Services are on the rise, and have increased by double digits during the pandemic. All aggregators are reporting nearly 50% of all sales are to subscription services. This is both in ebooks and audiobooks. 

In the Bookwire report mentioned above for Europe digital sales during the lockdown, they also mentioned a 37% rise in people signing up for new digital ebook and audiobook subscriptions. How does this breakdown by subscription service?

·       In terms of worldwide reach, ScribD is in 194 countries. Though they had a difficult start when Amazon challenge them with Kindle Unlimited only a year after startup, they stuck with it and hit 1 million subscribers at the beginning of 2019. They reported a 36% rise in the first half of 2020.

·       Amazon’s KDP Select for authors (Kindle Unlimited for readers) is still the largest membership at an estimated 10 million subscribers in the eleven countries it serves. They are certainly the dominant subscriber service in the U.S. and the U.K. However, major publishers have mostly refused to sign up their front list, and most everywhere else in the world they far outpace Amazon KU subscriptions in those countries. In addition, authors are forced to choose between exclusivity to participate in KU vs going with many other subscription services that have no exclusivity.

·       In 2017 Kobo introduced the Kobo Plus Subscription model in Belgium and the Netherlands as a pilot. They were primarily concerned about piracy and tracking. It did so well they launched in Canada at the beginning of 2019 and launched in France this year. With a membership of approx. 170,000 they are not in the range of other subscription services. However, given their worldwide reach in retail books, it is possible they will grow more quickly over the next few years.

·       Sweden’s Storytel hit 1 million subscribers in June 2019. In the first half of 2020 they reported subscriber growth of 38% and streaming revenue growth of 45%. They were also able to raise over $96 million dollars in new funding, showing a strong vote of confidence in the unlimited subscription model. They are major service in 16 countries, including: Bulgaria, Denmark, Finland, Iceland, India, Italy, Mexico, the Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Russia, Spain, Sweden, Turkey, the United Arab Emirates, and Singapore. Along with ScribD it is their purpose to become larger than Kindle Unlimited for the rest of the world outside the North America. They have 40 additional countries on the radar and may use recent fundraising to accomplish that quickly. 

In short, though western publishing has not embraced subscription services, this is a huge opportunity for indie publishers—particular those looking to grow their market share. It is true that the royalties per unit are less (based on how far readers read in the book), but the discoverability is very high with more people trying your books and, if they like it, reading the whole thing. ScribD is still a full royalty pay when the full book is read. Unlike Amazon KU which averages about 30% of unit sales royalties when the full book is read. Furthermore, no one except Amazon requires exclusivity. 

International Sales Increase at a Faster Rate Than U.S. Sales 

I think most American’s tend to really think U.S. centric in terms of sales and readers. Interestingly, U.S. readers are not the most readers in the world. Many are above us in terms of daily book reading habits as this graphic from Statista shows in 2017. 

For a larger graphic with more details go to the Global English Editing World Reading Habits which takes several Statista reports and breaks it down into more details. Including which were the most popular books read in various countries. 

Though the U.S. began at the leading edge of ebook technology and people regularly online, we are no longer in the lead in terms of innovation and certainly not the lead in terms of the number of people online. Partly that is due to simple population numbers, but also the per capita number of readers in other countries are a lot higher than in the U.S. 

One book-centric expert on this is Mark Williams, Editor in Chief of The New Publishing Standard (TNPS) which focuses on the Worldwide Market in print and ebook. 

“Today there are just shy of 4.7 billion people online, many in places you’d least expect. The USA is not the biggest. In fact, it comes in at only third place, behind China (854 million internet users) and India with 560 million people online. The USA has 312 million online and no room to grow.” –Mark Williams 

I’ve heard some people say, “Sure they have internet but that doesn’t mean they are readers or spend money purchasing books.” The world’s biggest book fairs prove this wrong. In Egypt. 3.5 million people attended their Bookfair this year. The Algeria, Iran, Sharjah (UAE) and Kolkata (India) International Book Fairs each attracted over 2 million visitors in 2019. The Riyadh (Saudi Arabia), Baghdad (Iraq), Buenos Aries (Argentina), Bangkok (Thailand), Havana (Cuba), Colombo (Sri Lanka), New Delhi (India), Muscat (Oman), Hyderabad (India) and numerous other international book fairs each attracted over 1 million visitors in 2019. 

Let’s compare that to the U.S. largest book fair, the New York Book Expo.  Attendance in 2019 was approximately 20,000 people. Slow to move to the virtual platform they changed dates of the expo three times 2020 and then cancelled altogether, setting a spring 2021 date. 

On the other hand, the UK’s 10-day Hay Festival from Wales quickly pivoted from in-person to online in April-May, drawing an online crowd in excess of 500,000 proving that literary events can be just a mouse click away. Also Big Bad Wolf pivoted from in-person events in 12 countries to online events with millions of books sold at each. Big Bad Wolf sells English-language books to Thailand,  Indonesia, Sri Lanka, The Philippines, Cambodia, South Korea, the United Arab Emirates, Pakistan, Myanmar, Taiwan, Singapore and Malaysia. The final online event was in November in Malaysia, their home country. Its four-day online sale extended to eight days because of the online traffic. They started with 1.5 million buyers online.   

How important are international sales? Consider that Penguin Random House opened an exclusive ebook store on Amazon in order to reach India’s 500 million internet users. 

“We are witness to, and participants in, a digitally-driven, global renaissance quite unprecedented in human history. Don’t let it pass you by while you obsess over one company and one or two markets.”Mark Williams, The New Publishing Standard. 

Artificial Intelligence (AI) Continues to Scale, Lowering Production Costs for Everyone 

Last year I talked a bit about AI inroads to publishing. There are many ways AI is being used regularly already. Some of these we may take for granted, not realizing it uses some type of AI. 

Research:  Publishing, especially in academia, involves tremendous amounts of research. Databases going online, journals online have cut this down over the past three decades. AI helps with this process by going through huge amounts of data in a matter of seconds and providing valuable results based on author, journal, keywords, phrases. 

Finding your target audience: Crafting your content to appeal to your target audience will take your published work to the next level. In addition to the help of SEO tools now available to indie authors (e.g., Yoast SEO for Wordpress sites), there are other AI-enabled tools that try to predict the behavior of your intended audience. This is especially true in advertising platforms like Facebook, Twitter, Google when you select targeted audiences. It is also available to individuals through tools like Publisher Rocket which does comparisons of competitor books, authors, sales, keywords, and categories. There is still more development in this area but the predictive abilities are much more robust than even three years ago. 

Automating routine tasks: Publishers and distributors regularly use AI to detect false or plagiarized content, recognize statistical errors, identify repetitive-sounding texts, fact-check key areas of published work and a lot more. These tasks traditionally require a lot of manpower. Combined with the data mining, this task alone lets authors publish larger amounts of data. 

Editing Text: Proofreading and formatting has long been available in a variety of software applications that indie authors can use. Even within formatting software, like Vellum, there is proofreading based on spelling and grammar. These tools allow you to fix errors in grammar and context. In the case of formatting, software provides specific style guides that ensure there is a consistent look and feel throughout a book. 

All of the above is already available, and has been available with software programs developed using AI tools. They will continue to get better as the tools learn. But the biggest development I’m following and am really excited about is the continued AI translations of text. Already, Google has an app for phones that can translate conversations in real time. If I encounter a Spanish speaking person, I can ask the app to translate spoken words to English and it will do it nearly simultaneously. It won’t be perfect but it will be understandable. This reminds me of Star Trek translators from the 1960s finally coming to fruition. 

Translating Books with AI 

Of course, translating books is a more difficult step. In spoken language you can get away with small mistakes because the other person isn’t expecting perfection and makes sense of your speaking from body language and gestures. However, books are the ultimate form of language nuance and context. In addition, the role of “voice” is critical. That means the translation is much more exacting. 

Currently, there are a variety of highly respected AI translation tools available to the nonfiction market that are used regularly by large businesses (e.g., legal, medical, and translation for general sales). AI has become 90% or more accurate for these market segments. In general, translation of nonfiction, particularly technical or expert-based nonfiction, is quite good. It tends to be more formal and uses terms that have already been translated thousands of times in journals or scientific publications. 

Where AI still needs more development is in learning the nuances of language, that are so embedded in good fiction or narrative nonfiction. For example, the use of pronouns, possessives, and personal plurals are all problematic in many languages. That is because of the relationship of people and the formal or informal language used within the story or nonfiction is different than it is in English. Where we may have one word, like “you,” other languages change that word based on the relationship of the speaker to the reader or a character in a fiction book. Then, of course, there are the difficulties of fiction language—particularly metaphor and simile, as well as idioms in humor. I’ve written a blog about this recently, Lost in Translation: A look at the viability of AI translation. The article describes in greater detail how AI works for translation and where authors can capitalize on it, as well as the important role of a human translator and/or editor. 

In terms of indie author accessibility to AI translation, there are two that are affordable. One is DeepL ($9/month for up to 5 books/month). You can load the entire book at once and get back the entire translation within a minute. They have most of the world languages available. 

The other is Google Translate online (free). You can copy and paste up to 5,000 characters, including spaces (about 600 words) at a time. Not only is this very time consuming, but you have to then copy the translation and paste it into a new document making sure the chapters and spacing are all done correctly. It appeared to me that the more words I copy and pasted, the less accurate it became as there was no relationship to the previous words to learn the context. For me, using Google Translate is not a viable option. 

I don’t think that AI translation will ever equal human translators. However, I do believe that we are close now, and in three more years it will be even better. I do think it is at the point where I can get a solid draft that can then be edited by a human translator. The good news is that cuts costs in half. Instead of the typical $5,000 for a 75K word book, translation editing costs between 30% and 50% ($1,500 to $2,500) depending on the language, the country, and the individual editor. 

Based on Publishing Changes What Might Your 2021 Prep List Look Like? 

·         Make sure your website is the best it can be. Take advantage of SEO software to increase discoverability as much as possible.

·         Freshen your online book descriptions and your author bio everywhere you can, taking advantage of keywords, categories, snippet descriptions and the like.

·         Check your email signature and clean out your inbox.

·         Consolidate to-do lists. Do the things you’ve been putting off (software updates, saving things to backups, security checks), especially the digital maintenance work that, if things go bad, could really impede your ability to promote a book or even exist.

·         If you aren’t already, consider expanding your international reach through aggregators and subscription services.

·         Begin thinking about translation and if it makes sense to you. You might begin small, with a novelette or novella and see how it plays. If you want to know where to start, consider German, Italian, Spanish, and French in that order.


Maggie Lynch is the author of 26+ published books, as well as numerous short stories and non-fiction articles.  Her fiction tells stories of men and women making heroic choices one messy moment at a time. 

She is the founder of Windtree Press, an author publishing cooperative with 23 authors and over 250 titles. She is also the owner of POV Author Services, a business dedicated to helping indie authors succeed in the business of writing and publishing. 

You can learn more about her and her career at: 

https://maggielynch.com

https://povauthorservices.com

https://windtreepress.com

 

Friday, December 4, 2020

Tis The Season!

 Hi, I’m Judith Ashley, author of The Sacred Women’s Circle series, soul nourishing romantic women’s fiction that honors pagan spiritual practices. My stories show you what life could be like if, in the darkest nights, you choose love and light.

Tis The Season! starts by the middle of October and runs through all of November and December and into January. October 2020 started and ended with Full Moons! And the last one in 2020 is 12/30/2020. I love standing out on my back decks under a Full Moon, drinking in the glory of night and the quiet light of the Moon.

All Hallows Eve, Halloween are the first “official” holidays of my tis the season.

Then comes November, my birth month. I choose something special as a gift to myself over a period of time that equals one day for each year of my life. I started this tradition when I celebrated my 50th and have never looked back. This year my birthday season goes into January!

Also, since I love Winter – the darker and drearier days – I’m in my element much of the time. Even though I have a fireplace, I do not spend my days curled up in front of it with a hot cup of tea and good book. Usually you’ll find me in the next room, my office, at the computer.

Of all the December tis the season spiritual holidays, I celebrate Winter Solstice and Christmas. The latter because I have great grands and grands and that is the spiritual holiday they celebrate.

There are about sixty-two days from Hallow’s Eve or Halloween to Thanksgiving (USA) and through the December spiritual holidays.

And then comes The New Year!!!

I’ve never been one who goes forth and parties although I did spend one memorable New Year’s Eve and Day at the Oregon Coast watching waves dash upon the rocks!!!

For this New Year’s Eve I’m already planning. Fire in fireplace, bottle of something sparkly (not sure what yet), paper and multiple pens in different colors. Once the fire is blazing, I will curl on the couch and consider the year past jotting down thoughts and feelings about what did and didn’t happen.

Lt. Col. Boyd C. Yaden with fans
What didn't?
I lost a longtime friend in June to CoVid-19, I didn’t get that week visiting my great grands, months went by and no hugs and without Zoom, those months would not have included seeing friendly faces. I’m a writer, a published author and my plans for 2020 in that department did not materialize at all.

What did?

I became somewhat proficient with Zoom, figured out how to use Insta-Cart, relied upon a neighbor to do some fresh produce shopping for me when she went to the store (yes, we independent types see that as a huge deal). I’ve a friend with dementia and I figured out a schedule for myself so I keep in touch with her.

I’ve also bitten one of my proverbial bullets and have taken two on-line classes with Maggie Lynch to learn Search Engine Optimization and how to reinvigorate my mailing list. I’ve started by giving my newsletter a name: Choices. My plan is to write about once a month. And I highly recommend you check out Maggie’s website. She is an excellent on-line (and in person) instructor!

I swept leaves off my front decks which has been beyond my physical strength for some time. I did pay a price with a sore shoulder for a few days but looking back I see it as a milestone regarding the regaining of strength and stamina.

I was pro-active and asked for a new doctor (of my choosing) when I learned my current PCP was leaving the group practice. And I chose Well! I battled and won the war against a mild Shingles outbreak (do get the immunization done).

Last but not least during my tis the season time frame, I signed up for two online courses in Divination Card Reading. I’m now a Certified Angel Tarot Card Reader and will have my general Divination Card Reader Certification by the end of December. There is magic in the cards or as I’ve learned within me.

As you can see, in many ways 2020 was a very good year!

What about 2021?

I’ve already started planning!!! By this time next year I will have spent a week at the beach, a week with my great grands. I’ll have Yes, You Can Create A Life You Love published.

I will have all the metadata up-to-date for my books and uploaded to all the vendors who sell my books.

I will have at least one in person author event.

Choices will be going out to my mailing list in about a month with tips on how to make choices that create the tomorrow we want to live in as well as news about authors and books I enjoy reading. Contests, updates on my writing, new releases and information I hope will entertain as well as inform.

You can sign up for my mailing list here

You can find all of my books at your favorite e-book vendor. Be sure to ask your local library if you’d prefer to read my books through that resource.


Learn more about Judith's The Sacred Women’s Circle series at 
JudithAshley.net

Follow Judith on Twitter: JudithAshley19

Check out Judith’s Windtree Press author page.

You can also find Judith on FB! 

© 2020 Judith Ashley

Thursday, December 3, 2020

Comfort and Joy by Dora Bramden

Comfort and Joy are exactly what I'm in need of this year. I also don't think I'm the only one. Finding the good feels and is different for each but some of us crafters know that a session at our craft table is the road to peace and contentment. Christmas is a great time for me because I love making Christmas decorations.

 I didn't know if I'd be celebrating the Christmas season with family and friends this year but decided I was going to decorate the house and do a full Christmas even if it was just for myself and Sam.  It was even more important because we would need cheering up if we were going to be missing out on seeing those we love this year.

When I'm crafting a decoration or putting a vignette together It doesn't matter too much how my projects turn out. They often look different in reality from what I'd imagined but so what. It's the creative process, moving my fingers and mind together to create, that shifts my body and mind from anxiety and tension to relaxed and peaceful.

I started early this year, in October. I began with making a Christmas Junk Journal. I found some cheap paper at the Reject shop and ordered a Stamperia 8x8 paper pad. I also used an embellishment pack from Miss Rose and Sister Violet and a digital Christmas kit from Artymaze Etsy Store. Once I had a collection of my favorite things, I went to work with old cereal boxes, old Christmas cards, tea-stained printer paper, magazine pages, and any bits and pieces of fabric and lace I could find. 

I worked for a solid couple of weeks, adding to the pages and collaging to my heart's relief. I created a book where I could record my thoughts and plans. I'm posting some pictures below of the cover and a few favorite pages. 







November arrived and I started thinking that I would get the tree in the family room up. I started working on some decorations for that. I printed out some free digital Santa pictures from The Graphics Fairy and pasted them to some cardboard. I then mounted that onto fabric covered cardboard and then added embellishments and a ribbon to hang it with.





The next step was to bring all the Christmas tubs out of the garage and put them under the verandah at my back door so that I could fossick through them whenever the mood struck. I hung up a lovely angel picture created by Sam's daughter when she was in kindergarten. I created a swag to hang at the top. 

Framed in a poster frame from KMart. I used some folded wrapping paper to create the border.

The boxes at my back door started to empty as November progressed and I created vignettes around my kitchen and family room. Traditional colors warmed my heart and the happy pops of red cheered me every morning when making my mug of tea. Who can't be happy when Santa is smiling at you from mugs next to the kettle and happy knee hugger elves smile on the window sill?

Here are some photos for your enjoyment.



I liked the paper plates so much that I have displayed them as if they were the best china.






December has arrived and I'm still going with my decorating. The dining room needs a table centerpiece and I haven't started on the Lounge Room yet. My boxes are nearly empty but there will be enough to finish the job. Currently, I'm working on a menu for Christmas day. It turns out we are going to be able to have some family come to enjoy Christmas lunch with us so I'm also working out who can bring what to share on the day.

During the uncertain days, I have found joy in getting ready for the festive season. It won't be exactly how I'd like it to be, there will be some members of my family who can't make it and there are some special others who've passed away. But they will be there because they're in our hearts always. 

The warmth of the season is a comfort to me and all the pretty things give me a great deal of joy. I'm wishing you and your loved ones, comfort and joy, this Christmas Season.

Wednesday, December 2, 2020

Re-spinning a Holiday Classic

By Robin Weaver 


It's a Wonderful Life is truly one of the all-time great holiday films, but let's be honest, the plot is hardly original. As a writer, I have been conditioned, since I first put my fingers on the keyboard, to always deliver the unexpected, so let's add some twists to this classic tale.

 

Having a fat old man be an angel is unexpected, even by today standards, so we’ll leave Clarence as is. No, wait. An angel is a bit predictable no matter what his shape. What if we made him a shape shifter? Hmm, that will screw up the plot. We want Clarence to evolve, not be dinner.

 

If not Clarence, who hears when George wishes he’d never been born? I know, he can wish on a penny. Oops—that’s absolutely predictable. Let's make it a dollar bill instead.

 

So George finds a dollar and… He simply cannot wish he'd never been born--even to a dollar bill. I mean seriously, how many times had that been done? Let's have him wish he'd been born a woman. To which the dollar replies, “The PMS alone would kill you. I like horses. What if I make you "my little pony" instead? 

 

And poof! Before George can protest, he’s got hooves and a shiny teal tail. He trots down the street, running into his mom—who falls and breaks a hip. Predictable, but what else can happen? Grandma has just been run over by a horse. She’s screaming, “Bloody horse murderer!” because she doesn’t recognize her son. Did I mention he’s a horse?

 

Anyway, George’s mom is rescued by Uncle Billy—who hasn’t been institutionalized because the Building and Loan is still going strong.  Don’t get me wrong, the Building and Loan collapsed (just like in the original story), only the government bailed out the financial institution. Billy splints mom’s broken hip and then kicks George the horse (didn’t expect that, did you? Evil grin).  Billy threatens to call--eh, can't be the police. Too ordinary. Instead, let's have Billy call the Evil Vet, Horsible Lecter. BIlly pulls out his mobile telegraph (hey, no cellphones in this era) and asked for Horsible.  The second George hears that name, he knows he's in deep manure and gallops home.

 

Mary will help him. Hold on, we have to make Mary less predictable, too.  She can’t be some lonely, scared spinster. Maybe George was holding her back. She’s gone to Vegas and become…a champion bull rider (Gotcha. You were expecting a showgirl, huh?)

 

So George realizes he shouldn’t have wished he was dead. Or a woman. And a bell rings—only let’s make it a bullhorn. In the old story, we all know the angel got his wings. In our story, the angel becomes…hmmm, how about a boy wizard.

 

Okay. You’re right. The original is better. Maybe with a classic, predictable is okay. Only let’s not call it predictable, we’ll call it tradition.

 

Hope your traditions are wonderfully predictable. Happy holidays, Everyone!

 


Tuesday, December 1, 2020

Another cookie recipe?!?!?!

As we enter the holiday season, many of us are coming to the realization that celebrations are going to look very different from previous years. Gatherings will be smaller, parties won’t happen at all, and relatives and friends won’t be coming home to visit. But even though much will be different – in a sucky way – one thing will remain very much the same in my house – in a yummy way. 

My fruitcake is baked and “curing” with periodic infusions of rum. The mincemeat (with real meat, apples, and lots of spices) is packed up and frozen for future pies, tarts, and cookies. And my freezer is full of butter for all the cookies I’ll be baking in the coming weeks. (I made sure to nab a large bag of flour this week in case our partial lockdown leads to a full lockdown and an interruption in the food supply chain.)

The cookie menu always includes traditional family recipes, plus one or two new-to-me confections that seem interesting. Grammy’s Shortbread Cookies take price of place, buttery and light and very more-ish. Soft Ginger Cookies, with bits of crystalized ginger, are perfect with an after dinner cup of tea. Pecan Fingers, similar to almond crescents, are packed with pecan flavour. About twenty years ago I added Swedish Christmas cookies to the line-up. An easy slice-&-bake buttery cookie, they’re flavoured with lemon peel and ground cardamom  – super yummy. Two years ago, I added Blueberry Streusel Thumbprint Cookies. Not strictly holiday cookies, they are nonetheless rich and special and a real treat.

I’m sharing the recipe for another cookie I bake every year at this time – Bea’s Sugar Cookies. They are an easy drop cookie that are then flattened with a drinking glass that’s been dipped in coloured sugar. They freeze well and are a hit with kids.

Sugar Cookies

½ cup unsalted butter, room temperature

½ cup vegetable oil

½ cup powdered sugar

½ granulated sugar

1 egg, room temperature

2 teaspoons vanilla extract

2 cups all purpose flour

½ teaspoon salt

½ teaspoon baking soda

½ teaspoon cream of tartar

Using stand mixer or hand mixer, cream together butter, oil, sugars, egg and vanilla until light and fluffy. Mix in flour, salt, baking soda and cream of tartar until well combined. Chill for 2 hours. 

Preheat oven to 350 F. Place rack in centre of oven. 

Scoop a heaping tablespoon of dough (or use a cookie scoop), roll it into ball, and place on parchment lined cookie sheet, spacing a few inches apart. Flatten slightly with the bottom of a drinking glass dipped in coloured sugar. 

Bake for 10 minutes, or until barely starting to colour around the edges. Cool on cookie sheet for 5 minutes, then transfer to cooling rack and cool completely. 


Wishing everyone a holiday season filled with peace, joy, good health...and cookies.


Luanna Stewart has been creating adventures for her imaginary friends since childhood. She spends her days writing spicy romance ranging from contemporary to paranormal. When not torturing her heroes and heroines, she’s in her kitchen baking something delicious. She lives in Nova Scotia with her patient husband, two spoiled cats, and five hens.

Website ~ Bookbub ~ Twitter ~ Instagram ~ Facebook ~ Goodreads ~ Amazon Author Page


Her wish will be granted…

When a mysterious note directs Miss Miranda Large to a tiny village in Cornwall to find her heart’s desire, she’d be a fool to not go. The excitement mounts when she meets a strange shopkeeper who claims that a magical keepsake will make possible her dream of marriage to a man with a title. But a snowstorm forces her to accept the hospitality of a sullen earl and Miranda fears she’s made a horrible mistake.

 He’s given up hope…

Edward Penhallion, the 12th Earl of Claverlock, is not in the mood to search for yet another wife. He longs to be left alone with his books and his dreams of revenge. But the arrival of a headstrong, sharp-tongued spinster forces him to play the charming host. Not a difficult task, given her intelligence and beauty.
 
As the blizzard rages, Edward discovers there’s more to Miranda than a lively wit and a lovely face. And Miranda wonders if the trappings of wealth are enough for true happiness.