As a child I loved winter.  We had a small hill in our back yard, and I learned how to ski on wooden skis with my initials burned at the tips.  My father had a workshop in the basement, and for a while he seemed to burn my initials on everything.  The working class version of a monogram.

The basement was warm, the oil burner in the corner of my father’s workshop.  My mother had a mimeograph machine there.  She taught English, and she used it to run of copies of tests, and also to publish the school literary magazine.   It was cozy and industrious in the cellar and smelled of sawdust, light machine oil, and heavy heating fuel.

It snowed a lot every winter.  My sisters and I walked a mile to school—back and forth, twice a day.  We came home for lunch, and Mim, our grandmother who lived with us, would have grilled cheese sandwiches waiting.  Jeopardy came on at noon so we’d take off our snowsuits, kick back, and eat our sandwiches along with Art Fleming.

Once, walking home for lunch, SB—a neighborhood boy too cute for his own good—pulled off my snow jacket and threw it up in a tree.  I tried to climb for it, but it was too high up there.  Mim told me, when I got home shivering and blue: “that means he likes you.”  I was in fourth grade, the mysteries of boys far beyond my comprehension.

We built snow forts and went on winter nature walks.  Juncos swarmed the suet we’d hang from maple branches.  We’d hang garlands of strung popcorn and cranberries on yew and mountain laurel, and when cardinals came we’d practice their clear calls.

The juxtaposition of being cold outside and cozy inside gave a feeling of safety and belonging to our winter childhoods.  We were lucky.  Nature surrounded us, and inside the house we were warm.  We had each other.

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  • http://silentwhisper1.blogspot.com/ Dee

    Such pleasant memories you have, sparking my own with the scent of saw dust and hint of glue, my father at his work bench, tooling about some other craft.
    I remember the basement and its low ceilings in the old two story house from which I grew up in Vancouver, upon a large hill over looking the city.Then as a child we had lots of snow, unlike now. Dad would take my older brother and I sledding up and down the hill, while mom washed the dinner dishes. Snow then would be up to my knees, bountiful for the city and a young gal like I…
    Sometimes my brother and I, upstairs in our converted two room attic, would point the telescope out my bedroom window across the city and up over Grouse Mountain, where we could see little specks of people skiing down the mountain. So neat. So long ago.
    That old house still stands today, I drove by it for the first time in years a month ago.A doctor and wife bought it from my parent’s. My parent’s eventually followed myself and brother out of the city and into the beautiful Fraser Valley.
    No snow here yet but I have very high hopes.Smiles~

    I hope you had a lovely Christmas, Luanne, and an even better New Year full of owl’s and much in inspiration.
    Warm hugs from BC~

    Dee~

  • http://www.jbarrett5.blogspot.com julie barrett

    been forever since we got snow enough to make snow forts (igloos)
    happy new year
    thanks for the chance in the contest.
    Julie

  • Dee Mercer

    I remember our shopping trips to our old fashioned downtown….the dime store and all the people everyone smiling and wishing all a Merry Christmas…

  • Amanda Killough

    What a beautiful memory! I am a southern girl and get excited at the hint of a couple inches of snow! Happy New Year!

  • Megan Valencic

    My favorite memories of winter from my childhood~ ice skating while it was still snowing and then going home to my mom making hot cocoa to warm us back up!
    Hope you had a wonderful holiday season

  • Terri Cylc

    What lovely memories! And reading just these brief paragraphs reminds me why I love reading your books- you write of things I myself have experienced or of things I want to experience! Love your books- please keep writing!

  • Sue Neyrinck

    This looks like it’s gonna be a wonderful book… I haven’t read one of her books I haven’t liked. It’s nice to compare things from my life to her books. Keep up the great job. Happy New Year 2012

  • Anne

    I still enjoy the cozy feeling of coming in after being out on a cold day, or better still, just staying in and enjoying a cozy day out of the cold

  • Paige Lovelace

    I used to remember my mom and I when I was little making snow angels. My mom has been gone for 11 years and those are the memories I carry with me. The snow all over us and just having fun

  • http://facebook judy eckerman

    Hi Luanne, it is just so much fun to try to have a chance to win a book from you, since I love your books, and save them all, and they are a treasure to me. yes, I like you also have wonderful memories of my upbringing on the family farm. An oil burner in the dining room for heat. Sliding down a self made hill on the inside of a scoop shovel with the handle in front of you. Trying to ice skate on second hand skates on the bad ice out in our field. Also, wooden skiis with one little strap across your boot, not much support. We had fun and made do with what we had. My older sister and our 2 or 3 outside dogs running all day long. Lots of wet mitens to lay on newspaper near the oil burner stove….it’s the good old days. Very dear to me. Best wishes in the New Year. Judy

  • Sarah

    We grew up on the edge of a forest preserve. It was a winter wonderland, literally in our backyard. Cross country skiing, sledding, ice skating or just walking under a tree lined snow canopy. Memories like these make me realize how lucky I was to have lived there.

  • Mary Ingalls

    Brought so many childhood memories to mind…including the snowsuits, mittens clipped to the sleeves, being so cold after playing outside in our snow forts or building the snowman and coming inside for hot chocolate or soup to warm up.

  • Cheryl Amos

    Brings back fond childhood memories! I only hope my children grow up with great memories as well! Happy New Year!

  • Linda Trevena

    Ah, those memories from long ago. We lived for a short period of time in the early 60′s in Sanborn, NY, which was a stone’s throw from Niagara Falls. Every winter, the mist from the Falls would coat everything in our little town with a gossamer ice coating. As a child, walking home from school in town, we could actually walk on top of the snow due to this ice coating.
    Hope you had a wonderful Christmas, and a New Year filled with happiness!

  • Anne Sutton

    I still enjoy the cozy feeling of coming in after being out on a cold day, or better still, just staying in and enjoying a cozy day out of the cold.

  • Sharon Teagarden-King

    UGH! Winters were only a childhood love. Memories of ice skating and sledding onto a frozen pond are that….memories….But again everything in Buffalo is frozen in winter. As an adult I dreaded the arrival of old man winter with a passion. Working at a Buffalo Hospital 3-11 saw me shoveling daily noon to 2 to go to work. YUCK!

  • Bonnie Dozler

    I have wonderful memories of my childhool. didn’t live in snow as a child…I so enjoy your books.

  • http://web.mac.com/sandrakhorn/sandrakhorn/Welcome.html Sandra Kucinich-Horn

    My dad had a work bench also. I remember the high whine of the saw and the silkiest feeling of the sawdust when we were allowed to let it run through our fingers. The scent of newly cut wood still takes me right back to the basement of Big Creek Parkway where I grew up in a suburb of Cleveland.

    I used to run around at night with my dog in the snow. The crunch of the snow was so loud in the quiet of the backyard. Somehow I did not get as cold as I do as an adult.

    Thanks for again taking me back to those warming memories.

  • Michelle Meade

    I loved winters as a child, plenty of snow , family , friends and the trees were so beautiful.

  • Irene Rexford

    My dad had a garage that he worked in, fixing cars and building things for us kids. The best was an upside down car hood that he would pull around the yard with us kids and dog sitting in it. Those were the days!!!

  • Tina Myers

    We lived by a canal when all 6 of us were young. Our Father would go out to the middle of the canal to make sure it was safe for all of us to ice skate. We would than go out with our shovel and clean off all the snow and skate all day and most of the night…We also had black snow from the paper mill that was there..The canal doesn’t freeze anymore and all the black snow is gone..But it was all fun…Thank you for giving me the chance to win.Happy New Year..

  • Andrea

    What memories! I too skiied in my yard, came home for lunch and watched Art Fleming host jeopardy. Thank you for writing your thoughts. I enjoyed the trip down memory lane.

  • http://facebook Teresa

    I loved iceskating on the small pond behind our house, sledding parties on Yodder’s Hill. I could stay out all day making snowmen and snow angels and not get cold.
    These days I’m happy inside in the warmth of a blanket on the sofa reading a great book.
    If it is snowing outside it means I don’t have to work and I can simply sit by the window and dream of days gone past.
    I Love your books, please keep up the Great work.

  • Lelia Sternitzky

    Awww! Memories of childhood. How I treasure them. My parents building a bonfire and sledding down the driveway with my three siblings. Making snow angels with my brother and homemade hot cocoa afterwards. Mom making snow ice cream and playing board games. Snowing so much that my mom would pull me to the bus stop on a sled. Kneeling to pray at the end of the day as a family, priceless.
    Thank you for the chance to enter the contest. Happy New Year.

  • Sylvia Marcoux

    I love winter, especially a snowy one. I have loved snowmen for as long as I can remember. I have some from my collection that I leave out all year long, at home and at work. “In the meadow we will make a snowman” is something I often sing out especially on a hot summer day ;-) Let it snow, let it snow, let it snow!!

  • http://Facebook Carol Wittebol

    One of my fondest memories as child was my dad flooding our gravel driveway so my best friend and I could skate on it. We’d go out after supper in the dark, with a lamp to light our way, and she’d teach me to figure skate. Using our imaginations, we’d put on shows for our imaginary audiences most nights. We loved those happy hours skating.
    Now as an adult I think about my poor old dad and how hard that must have been for him to get into his car to go to work each morning, having to navigate his way across the glare smooth ice! He was the best dad a girl could ever want, and I loved him for that.
    Thank you for helping me to relive another happy childhood memory Luanne.

  • Terri Tribble

    I have NEVER had enough snow to build a snow fort. How much fun would that be. Everytime we get a few inches, I’m dragging my boys outside to play with me. Once when they were little, I knew it would all be melted by the time they woke up and it was snowing, so I woke them up at 2 a.m., bundled them up and we all went outside to play and made a great memory.

  • Marti Selle

    I too loved snow as a child.Not so much now that I am older, but when ever I see “Christmas” snow I’m taken back to an ordinary evening when I was maybe 11 or 12. I was walking to a friend’s house and the snow was so beautiful! It sparkled and crunched in the cold night, yet it fluttered down in huge fluffy bundles. It made me so happy just to be out in it and enjoy the sight and feel of it. Of course it was nearing Christmas time, so , for me, it will forever be “Christmas snow”. Your books bring me back to some of these wonderful memories, some are sad, some are joyful but always you touch the part of me that remembers and I know that you truly understand the ups and downs and majesty of our lives.

  • Jennifer Goodwin Cook

    These are the memories of winter I have always wanted… I live in Central Florida and I honestly can not remember a cold Christmas. This year I wore a green tank top! Thank you for putting such beautiful images in my head. Happy New Year!

  • http://FaceBook Marie Grasso

    I remember opening the front door and it was just all white snow. Nobody got out.We dug tunnels to the center of the street and down the middle so everyone could get to the corner store.Is this the start of a good book??

  • G K Alexander

    I would love to win a copy of “As a child I loved winter” Thank you for thinking of us and giving us a chance with a giveaway!

  • G K Alexander

    Sorry What Matters Most!

  • Libby Teague

    Where I live in the South, snow is an event. A winter holiday. The little we typically get tends to close down businesses and schools. Here’s hoping for snow!

  • http://FaceBook Marie Grasso

    I remember opening the front door and there was just white snow up to the top, no one got out. We dug tunnels out to the center of the street and everyone could get to the corner store. We didn’t have side walks and there weren’t that many cars. We mostly walked everywhere.It was fun meeting my friends in the tunnel. Is this the start of a good story??

  • Libby Teague

    Where I live in the South, snow is an event. A winter holiday. The little we typically get tends to close down schools and businesses. Here’s hoping for snow!

  • http://FaceBook Marie Grasso

    I’m 70 years old and I finger type so this is very hard for me. I don’t see to well either!

  • http://FaceBook Marie Grasso

    I give up!!

  • Linda Dixon

    Oh…soooo many memories. Crunching snow, ice skating on the frozen lake…daytime and moonlight.Igloos in the front yard, shoveling the driveway, snow days. Mittens, boots and snowball fights! Iceicles dripping on sunny days and blizzards to keep us in and grounded for 3 days at a time. Those were the sweet days of childhood!

  • Dana Chumbley

    I love snow, we get a little every year. I like it best when I get to stay home and enjoy the weather!

  • Terri

    Bundled up so that it was hard to walk. Having to be told to come in from playing beacause lips were blue! Praying for a snow day from school. Wonderful memories wvoked by yor post. Thanks!

  • Sue P.

    As a chile, I loved winter, too. I think that changed when it was no longer fashionable to have snowball fights, make snow angels and snowman, probably around junior high. In High School, we would rent our the local arena and play hockey at midnight. With my own kids, it was great to dress them up to go outside, but the older I got, the more the cold and snow bothered me. I blizzard was great, but only if everything closed and we were all together at home trying to dig out! But I do love watching a snow fall, and the ice on the windows.

  • Linda Taday

    I remember liking winter, the air so crisp and cold..now, I need warmth. I’d rather remember the fun we had in the cold and snow than to live it now.

  • Anne Sutton

    Just enjoy a freezing cold day by building a roaring fire in the fireplace and stay in your pajamas all day. It’s the most wonderful feeling.

  • Laurena

    I still remember vividly when I was a five-year-old girl; I used to pray for a snow. Mostly, between the month of May and June, rain falls directly to the ground that seems to shower those little flowers, it sprinkles a heavy drop to every grass till it shines with their colors. The rain gives so much moisture to those lovely plants that each little scrubs begins to be more alive and glossy. I can still remember that I could only feel a cold breeze within my skin during rainy season and in the midst of this strong pouring rain, my dream started to grow. As a young child, I wish to experience that heavy snow to fall in my feet just like what rain does. That time, I wish to feel my cheeks being frozen by the icy caress of snow. But, that will only be dream that will never be granted since I live in the Philippines. For me, to experience winter is exceptional that is why I envy your experience. How I wish I could experience it during my childhood years but all I can do is to appreciate what is given in my life. Since Philippines is a tropical country, I will never experience winter but then, I still have great summer that let me love the beautiful sunset along the beach and rainy season that let a little cold breeze in our tropical country.

  • Renata

    The winter is beautiful and serene with snowflakes falling to the ground ~ as long as I’m inside snuggling by a warm fireplace! Thanks so much for the giveaway & Happy 2012!

  • Georgiana

    Wishing you a very happy winter season Luanne and a Happy New Year 2012! Thank you for all your inspirational stories and for the giveaway!

  • Gina

    Wow, threw your coat in the tree? That sounds like love! A boy in the 3rd grade ripped the pom pom off the end of my favorite winter hat and I cried. Mom told me it meant that he liked me but I wasn’t feeling it. I was discgusted.

  • http://yahoo julia vallati

    dosen’t it seem it was so cold and snowey ,when were young .we walked to and from school every day for lunch also

  • http://facebook Nancie Garcia

    Wow, it’s funny how saying something can bring back the sense of smell. I remember the smell of mimeographs! Sounds like a great childhood, spending time with your family.

  • Shyanna

    Oh, this brings back memories. I loved Winter when I was little, but these days it seems like we don’t get the big snow like we used to. This note has reminded me of so many fond memories! Thanks for sharing!

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