• Blog
    • Email
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • Pinterest
    • RSS
    • Twitter

Michelle Ule, Author

History, Real Life and Faith

  • Home
  • Who is Michelle Ule, anyway?
    • Michelle Ule’s Genealogy Interests
    • Writing Tips
    • Speaker and Teacher
  • Contact
    • Michelle Ule Media Kit
  • Oswald & Biddy Chambers
    • Mrs. Oswald Chambers
    • Biddy, Kathleen and Oswald Chambers Blog Posts
    • Media Kit–Biddy and Oswald Chambers
  • Books
    • The Dogtrot Christmas–Outtakes and Research Details
    • Bridging Two Hearts–Backstory and Research
    • An Inconvenient Gamble–Inspiration and Research
    • The Gold Rush Christmas
    • The Yuletide Bride–Backstory and Research
    • The Sunbonnet Bride–Outtakes and Back Story
    • A Poppy in Remembrance
    • Find Michelle Ule’s Books
  • Topical Blog Posts
    • Faith
    • Traveler’s Tales
      • Traveler’s Tales by Location
    • Writing Life
    • Life’s challenges
    • Spiritual issues
    • God’s love
    • Laughter
    • Historical Research
    • Bible study
    • WW I Posts
  • Blog
    • Topical Blog Posts
      • Faith
      • Traveler’s Tales
        • Traveler’s Tales by Location
      • Writing Life
      • Life’s challenges
      • Spiritual issues
      • God’s love
      • Laughter
      • Historical Research
      • Bible study
      • WW I Posts
  • Resources

in Writing Life

12 Days of a Pioneer Christmas: Cynthia Hickey

12 Days of Christmas promotion

For a review of the stories, see the intro post here: http://wp.me/p3HcoH-1aY

Cynthia Hickey

            Cynthia Hickey pulled off quite a surprise in her novella A Christmas Castle. When Annie, a mail order bride, arrives in Arizona to meet the man she’s married by proxy, the situation turns a little awkward: the man is dead and has left behind an orphaned daughter!

It’s hard to imagine how anyone could turn such a beginning into a romance!

“I was surprised by how much Annie cared for a man she never met,” Cynthia laughed.

The author of numerous romances ranging from historical to contemporary, Cynthia loves the 19th century, “especially anything to do with pioneers and cowboys.”

The idea for her A Christmas Castle came from thinking about dugouts and what it would be like to live in what is basically a hole in the ground. “Thankfully, I’ve never had to live in one,” she said, noting she had to do research on a form of housing frequently used when Arizona was settled.

A southwestern dugout

Library of Congress photo

“The germ of the story was contentment and the reason for the season. Most people today would have a hard time being content and celebrating while living in a hole in the ground.”

Her heroine had obstacles, and it only got more complicated for her hero (a handsome neighbor) who didn’t want to spend any time in such a small, cramped spot underground.

Cynthia has some wonderful photos of dugouts along with insight into the historical writing process on her blog today: http://www.cynthiahickey.blogspot.com/

Annie, however, is determined to celebrate Christmas the right way, with a Christmas tree. Trying to fit it in provides a humorous scene.

Cynthia would like to have been there in the story, however, “especially when the characters discovered that loves makes any home a castle.”

Like them, she’s learned to be content in whatever situation God has placed her.

While Cynthia lives near Phoenix, she needed to do research to authenticate her story. “I’ve been to Tucson, but not far into the desert where the ranches are, so I had to research the Tucson weather. Even that two-hour drive can change things. Who knew it sometimes snowed in Southern Arizona?”

Similarly, she doesn’t think she’d make a particularly good Arizona pioneer, “I like my air conditioning.”

The great-granddaughter of the first white baby born in NebraskaTerritory, Cynthia comes from a family that owned a stagecoach stop. She hopes someday to write a story based on her family’s history.

Cynthia Hickey   Meanwhile, she’s making memories at Christmas with her own family which includes seven children and five grandchildren. “On Christmas day, we start off with a prayer and a toast, then put something in Jesus’s stocking that only we can give him. Later that day, we meet everyone for dinner and White Elephant gifts. The season is a big deal for us as we celebrate the birth of Christ.”

Cynthia will be sharing her own thoughts about A Christmas Castle, contentment and A Pioneer Christmas Collection on her website today: www.cynthiahickey.com.

Have you ever had to squeeze a Christmas tree into tight quarters? Click to Tweet

Like this:

Like Loading...

Related Posts:

  • 12 Days of Christmas promotion
    12 Days of Pioneer Christmas!
  • Kathleen Fuller
    12 Days of Pioneer Christmas: Kathleen Fuller
  • Join or Die flag
    12 Days of a Pioneer Christmas: Shannon McNear

Filed Under: Writing Life Tagged With: A Christmas Castle, A Pioneer Christmas Collection, Arizona dugouts, Cynthia Hickey, mail order brides

« 12 Days of Pioneer Christmas!
12 Days of Pioneer Christmas: Kathleen Fuller »

Comments

  1. JaniceG says

    August 21, 2013 at 5:30 AM

    I loved reading about the dugout home. I can’t imagine trying to fit a Christmas tree in there. Determination makes a lot of things happen!

    We have a smallish tree so I have never had trouble fitting it in. Sometimes it has been difficult to fit Christmas into the budget.

    Loading...
    Reply
    • Michelle Ule says

      August 21, 2013 at 8:16 AM

      It obviously must have been a small tree! 🙂 Maybe even just a branch . . .

      Loading...
      Reply

Thoughts? Reactions? Lurker?Cancel reply

Meet the Author

Michelle Ule

Michelle Ule is a bestselling author of historical novellas, an essayist, blogger and the biographer of Mrs. Oswald Chambers: The Woman Behind the World's Bestselling Devotional.

You've come to the right place to read more about her, Biddy, Oswald and My Utmost for His Highest!

Read More More About Her

Newsletter Subscription

Sign up for news and monthly updates--including a free link to Writing about Biddy and Oswald Chambers: Stories and Serendipities.


Let’s Connect

  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • RSS
  • Twitter
Privacy Policy | Cookie Policy

Search

Archives

Copyright © 2025 · Market theme by Restored 316

%d