Winter Blogfest: Kristina W. Kelly

This post is part of Long and Short Reviews’ Winter Blogfest. Leave a comment for a chance to win one copy of the paperback or ebook (winner’s choice) of Tavern Tale – a cozy sapphic fantasy adventure. US only. Non-US, the ebook of Tavern Tale.

Cozy Winter Favorites Festivals, Holiday Lights, and Cold Weather Tea

My favorite holiday is Halloween…until it’s over and then I’m sure that my favorite holiday is Christmas. From the lights and the atmosphere, to burying myself in blankets, the season certainly holds some of my favorite things. It was these favorite things that inspired many of the events and items in my cozy fantasy novel, Tea Tale. The story is set during the in-world winter holiday, Midwinter Nights Faire. Let me tell you about my favorite winter holiday things from the real world and how they influenced my fantasy tale!

Not Just Light Strands

I love Christmas lights! Not just the light strands around the tree, or the glowing rainbow on the eaves of houses. I love candle lights in the windows and the lighted yard decorations and displays that have scenes and shapes like penguins jumping over sleighs. So when I wrote Tea Tale, I had one of their traditions be lighted lanterns. Strings of them cross over streets and hang over the market, and shops and living areas have smaller light strands – all lit by a little bug called a fireworm. To me, festive lights are like little dots of magic.

Hot Tea

Year round I love tea, but especially in winter months a hot cup of tea hits just right. Some of my favorite blends are made with black tea leaves and aromatic elements like vanilla and lavender. When I sat down to write Tea Tale, I knew that I wanted to have tea drinking be a central theme for the story. In the book, there are three main teas that are served and they were inspired by some of my favorite tea drinks I consume more often during winter months.

Foggy Iramont – this drink is inspired by an earl grey London Fog. Key notes are bergamot, hint of citrus, lavender, and vanilla. I recommend “Lady Lavender” from The Tea Spot or “Earl Grey Creme” from The Spice and Tea Exchange. And then add some lavender and milk, and whip to a frothy goodness before consuming.
Divine-i-tea – this drink is inspired by root beer and cream soda. I recommend something like Root Beer tea from Stash Tea. An alternative, and one of my all-time favorite tea blends, is the Winter Solstice tea from The Tea Spot as it has licorice and butterscotch notes which gives it a hint of that root beer flavor.
Snowshroom Spice – this tea was inspired by chai tea, but with a twist. Like a dessert in a liquid form, it has notes of chocolate and cinnamon. And in the book, it’s made from mushrooms from the north. In the real world, I recommendChocolate Chai Supreme from Harney & Sons.

Winter Festivals

Lastly, I enjoy a good winter market or festival. Near me is a German Christmas market that happens every year, Christkindlmarkt. The performers like jazz bands and dancers, the food like hot salted pretzels and hot cocoa, and the vendors that have unique items especially the festival-specific collector gifts like mugs shaped like boots and wooden ornaments. I don’t even have to buy anything!

(Narrator: she did. In fact, she purchased cheddar popcorn and various chocolates and cookies and—)

Ok, yes I did buy things. But I also watched the ice skaters, the polka band, visited the giant Christmas tree, and made a craft with my kids. But the best part? Making memories with my family and starting traditions. I tried to capture all of this in Tea Tale as their Midwinter Nights Festival occurs around the city at night and features games, street vendors, special items, and a bazaar.

What about you? What are your favorite cozy things or moments about winter and holidays?

 

Tea makes everything cozier in Trelvania!

Divine has learned a lot about herself, her magic, and her goddess. But now she and Saph are getting ready for the Midwinter Nights Faire, and that’s the worst time for her magic to go haywire! She might be able to talk to animals now, and Saph seems to be flirting with other patrons. Is there anything left in Iramont for Divine?

It will take an unlikely quest, some world-shaking revelations, and some unexpected friends to show Divine her direction in life. The journey will be a tale to tell…over tea!

 

Kristina W. Kelly is an author of poetry, short stories, and novels including the coauthored epic fantasy and sci-fi fusing series the Etherea Cycle. Her scifi and fantasy poetry collection Imaginari includes her photography, and her cozy fantasy adventure series Tales of Trelvania was inspired by RPGs.

Kristina is Secretary for Poetry Society of Indiana (2025), published in online poetry magazines and anthologies, and has received multiple honorable mentions and semi-finalist from the Writers of the Future contest. She won second place in the 2023 Poe-it Like Poe Contest.

Since childhood, writing stories on her mother’s typewriter or trying to catalog her own books like a library, Kristina has been in love with storytelling. Her undergraduate pursuits focused on Psychology, Music, and Computer Science. With trumpet as her main instrument and a connection to nature, Kristina often works music and visual landscapes into her writings.

She takes photography, makes various crafts, plays video games (RPGs are her favorite), dabbles in other instruments, and tends to her flower garden. She loves going on new adventures in the great wide somewhere (sometimes just by picking up a new book). Kristina resides in Indiana with her husband and sons.

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Free Short Story: The Untethered House

We were excited and anxious, or maybe we were anxiously excited, but either way, this was the first house we were purchasing as a couple. It signified a big step in our relationship and our lives. On the advice of our agent, we had the house inspected before finalizing the purchase, but, well, we passed on some of the steps because they didn’t seem necessary. I mean, everything looked fine.

We should have known better.

Yes, we hired a professional to check the foundation, the plumbing, and the electrical wiring, not just for soundness but also for insecurity. The last thing anyone wants is a home that lacks confidence. We made sure there were no infestations of Dadaists in the attic (we were told that’s where they typically nest when writing manifestos) and we also had the house scanned for dentists, particularly orthodontists, who are almost impossible to get rid of once they’ve established themselves. We even had it checked for existential termites, the kind that eschew wood but keep you up all hours of the night by doubting your existence – even when you’re right there in front of them! It’s maddening.

So, when we woke up that first morning after moving in, we were quite surprised to find our beautiful backyard view of the woods was gone and we were now looking out on a strip-mining operation. We attempted to put an optimistic spin on the change, telling ourselves it was probably just the house getting used to its new owners and we’d be back at our original address the next day.

We decided to simply go about our business. We painted one of the bedrooms – post-apocalypse blue, it’s all the rage. We even attempted our first barbecue on the deck, but with all the strip-mine phosphates in the air, we had to call it off. There’s a limit to how much thyme and rosemary you can put on chicken to cover up the taste of variscite.

That night we went to bed tired but hopeful we’d wake up in our original neighborhood. Our situation only became more precarious as the next morning we found ourselves suspended several hundred feet over a scientific outpost in Antarctica. How did we know it was Antarctica? The emperor penguins tipped us off. How did we know they were emperor penguins? Because of all the coronation ceremonies.

We wrote a note, rolled it up, tied it to one of those little Hummel statues – I think it was “Girl with a Deringer Hunting Sheep” – and dropped it out the front door so someone from the outpost could let our families know we were okay. Cell phone service was really spotty at our altitude.

Knowing our families would be informed, we opened up a bottle of Chateau de Micky Dolenz, my partner’s favorite – it had hints of boysenberry, newsprint, and innocence – and discussed our situation. We both agreed we should have asked more questions of our realtor, especially when she commented that the neighborhood we were looking at was “on the move.” You know how it is though, you see and hear what you want to see and hear. We needed to contemplate our next move, figuratively and literally.

First, we came to grips with reality. We were the owners of a dimensionally unstable house. It’s not completely unheard of, but it is rare. It usually occurs when a house, which given its stationary nature, is unduly influenced by owners with a high concentration of nomadic DNA. Some houses are just more sensitive than others. My partner had Phoenician ancestors and I came from a long line of furniture movers, so we fit the bill.

Faced with our new situation, we determined we had two choices. We could relist the house which would require full disclosure, so we’d end up selling at a loss. Or keep it and have our dwelling desensitized by a gravity druid, which wasn’t always guaranteed to work, as it depended largely on the house’s receptivity. But which to choose?

We decided to make a list of pluses and minuses. On the plus side, if we kept the house and it remained dimensionally unanchored, we’d never have to deal with surprise visits from in-laws. We could also earn some extra income by listing our home on WhoKnowsWhere BNB. On the minus side, mail delivery would be inconsistent at best, our daily commute could last weeks, and throwing a party was out of the question unless it had a scavenger hunt theme.

Our debate went on for several days as we found ourselves waking up in different locales each morning. Once we found ourselves in the savannah, surrounded by thousands of migrating accountants. We let them pass through the living room while we hid upstairs. We didn’t want to risk an audit.

The next day, we seemed to be in the middle of a town square, which at first seemed benign, until we discovered it was the day of the annual hippogriff celebration, which naturally included a parade. And guess where the staging area was? Yep, right where we were. That was preferable to what happened the following day. We were precariously balanced on a ledge on K2. Lucky for us, the local sherpas offered to share their oxygen in exchange for some tea and crullers.

As much as we enjoyed the travel, the situation was becoming untenable. We had both taken a week away from our jobs to work on the new house, but our time off was coming to a close. We had to get back to our routine, one way or another.

We think the house must have sensed our anxiety because something changed.

Each and every weekday morning the house now materializes quite close to where we each work, usually in an open lot or atop a parking garage. We have breakfast, leave for the day, after which it vanishes until it’s time to pick us up at the end of the day.

Each evening, we and our newly responsive house return to our original address. But the weekends? Well, our weekend destinations are always something special.

The relationship with our house is so good now, we can leave a list of things to do on our refrigerator door and the house will materialize in the backyards of whichever contractors we need for the job. It’s come in very handy so far, especially when something unexpected happens, like the day we found a litter of hippogriffs in the broom closet.

Now, whenever we talk to anyone who’s thinking about purchasing a home, we tell them all about the three most important real estate considerations to keep in mind: dislocation, dislocation, dislocation.

About the Author: Rob Roy O’Keefe is the author of Small Stories: A Perfectly Absurd Novel.

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LASR Anniversary Scavenger Hunt: Past Imperfect by Michael Parker

Thanks for joining us on our 15th anniversary scavenger hunt! There are two ways to enter to win and it’s easy to play– first read the blurb below, then answer the question on the first Rafflecopter. You might win a $100 Amazon or Barnes and Noble GC (along with other prizes). Follow and visit authors’ social media pages on the second Rafflecopter and you’re entered to win another $100 Amazon/BN GC (along with other prizes)!

It is two years since the wife of best-selling author Max Reilly died in a car crash along with her lover. Max is still recovering from her death and deception, but when he meets Emma — who is awaiting divorce from her violent husband — he quickly becomes attracted to her. Emma is cautious and keen to hold back. Max is determined but needs to keep his secrets from her. This becomes increasingly difficult for Max when he finds himself facing his past and one secret in particular involving violence, murder and betrayal.

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