Hello and welcome to the latest blog from the Olivia Rose Diaries. Now is the time to marvel at how quickly the year has flown by, the time to take stock of what has been and look forward to what is to come. This week between Christmas and New Year always feels like an in-between sort of time, a phase where I feel in limbo. Each year I resolve to keep myself busy so that it won’t feel that way – but it always does.
We have spent our Christmas this year house and pet-sitting for our friends in the next village. It is only a mile away from Le Shack and yet it feels like a different world. The house is on top of the hill, with a sunny aspect and clear views over the tree tops and valleys all the way to the Pyrenees. The mountains are around 50 km away but on a sunny day, when they are sharply outlined against a blue sky, they seem so close that I feel I could touch them. Sunsets and sunrises have been stunning as the air has turned colder.


Le Shack has a completely different outlook, situated as it is on the shady side of the hill, surrounded by oak forests and rolling hills. I often feel as if we are embedded in the hillside itself, our views more immediate and less lofty. Both homes are in beautiful situations, but I find it comforting to think that you don’t have to go very far to find something completely different.
As yet we have had no snow anywhere near the cabin this year, but that hasn’t stopped me reading a couple of books with a snowy theme and I thought I would share them with you as the year draws to an end.
The first is called The Snow Tourist, by Charlie English, who wonders what it is about snow that leaves us spellbound. Part memoir, part travelogue, the author travels to the cold places of the world in a quest to experience snow in its many guises, both fearful and wonderful.

I’m just over half way through this book and have found it fascinating and satisfying, from seeing how the Innuit communities have adapted to living in harmony with the snow, to the sports fanatics who push themselves to the limit in their bid to conquer nature at its most extreme. His honest account of his own battle with fear on the high peaks gives added depth, an apt reminder that the mountains will always have the last word.
The second book is a novel by Eowyn Ivey and is called The Snow Child. It is set in Alaska in the 1920’s, with a husband and wife beginning a new life on a smallholding in the wilderness. The descriptions of the landscape are mesmerising, a place so harsh and yet so beautiful that it takes a special person to survive.

The couple lost their first-born child ten years ago and still carry the sadness with them, so when a wild and fey young girl appears after a snow storm one night they believe that perhaps they have been given a second chance. Fairy tales and reality are interwoven so skilfully that the reader is as bemused and enchanted as the husband and wife. This is one of those books that draws you in, makes you care deeply for the characters and sympathise with their struggles. I couldn’t put it down. It’s the sort of book to read by the fire with a stock of biscuits to hand, a perfect antidote to winter. Magical.
And the third book is not about snow at all. I haven’t read it yet but it is on my ‘to buy’ list for 2024.

It’s called Micro Adventures by Alastair Humphreys and is described by the author as ‘taking the spirit of a big adventure and squeezing it into a day or even a few hours.’ That sounds an excellent idea to me and I hope it is going to provide me with some inspiration for making the most of 2024.

And that about wraps it up for this year. As ever writing this blog has been a joy and I have enjoyed getting to know you all and sharing my travels with you. I wish you the best for the coming year and look forward to adventures to come, whether they be micro, middling or mammoth – and hopefully a combination of all three!
All the best.
MJ
Here’s to more adventures! That’s a good thought to begin the year with. I love ‘The Snow Child’. Fantastic book. Have you read ‘Miss Smilla’s Feeling For Snow by Peter Hoeg? I remember it as being absolutely fabulous!
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Hi Tracey. Thanks for the tip. Will have a look! Hope you are tangoing your way into the new year – a micro adventure if ever there was one.
MJ
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Thank you for another year of easy and inspiring reading
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Glad you enjoyed it!
MJ
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I found ‘The Snow Child’ so unusual a book, impossible to peg to any genre. It kept my mind busy trying to fathom it!
Love that mountain view, nice spot to enjoy the holiday. 🙂
Hard to believe that ’23 is just about a wrap, time is flying. Happy 2024!
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Hi Eliza. And the same to you. Another year of flowers!
MJ
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🙂
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Lovely shots of the scenery, especially the mountains.
I enjoyed ‘The Snow Child’. Such a strange book, but one that stays with you.
Bonne fin d’année and all the best for 2024.
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Hi Vanessa. And the same to you. Another year of happy blogging.
MJ
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Pictures are great and inspiring as always and thanks for sharing the book recommendations.
When do you transition from LeShack to LeBoat in 2024?
How is the next book going? Your story is always interesting and when pictures are included even more interesting.
All the best as 2023 ends and 2024 begins;
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Hi Frank. Glad you have enjoyed the blog. We go back to the boat sometime in April and expect to spend more time in the Netherlands, maybe going on into Germany but it will depend on finances!! Next book progressing well thank you.
All the best for 2024.
MJ
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So wonderful to hear and see your different views of your country side.
The snow child sounds like heart tugging read!
May your year ahead be filled with sunshine and laughter🙏
Kind regards
Mary
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Hello Mary. That sounds like it will make a good year! Could particularly do with the sunshine as it’s blowing a gale and flooding at the moment.!! All the best for 2024.
MJ
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A very happy new year to you and Michael. The Snow Child sounds like an interesting book to read, will definitely put it on my to get list… hopefully on Kindle! It has been raining cats and dogs here also, with many places getting flooded. Thankfully not us!! 2024 seems to have blown in with a rage. Take care both, stay safe and warm, and happy house sitting…..
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Hi Ann. Happy new year to you both!
MJ
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