Sarah Clegg

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Sarah Clegg



Average rating: 3.8 · 2,989 ratings · 474 reviews · 2 distinct worksSimilar authors
The Dead of Winter: Beware ...

3.72 avg rating — 2,102 ratings — published 2024 — 7 editions
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Woman's Lore: 4,000 Years o...

really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 887 ratings7 editions
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Quotes by Sarah Clegg  (?)
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“In the Victorian era, the wildness of Christmas wasn’t just tamed – it became thoroughly domesticated. The new fashion for Christmas celebrations embraced the festivities, the good cheer and the parties, but also set them firmly inside the home. Family was becoming central to Christmas, with Queen Victoria and Prince Albert portraying themselves celebrating in domestic bliss, surrounded by their children.”
Sarah Clegg, The Dead of Winter: Beware the Krampus and Other Wicked Christmas Creatures

“Those who are gone, those who are leaving us, draw close again at Christmas, whether passing through in Perchta’s hunt, attending ghostly churches on Christmas Eve or conjured by our memories, and we reach out to them.”
Sarah Clegg, The Dead of Winter: Beware the Krampus and Other Wicked Christmas Creatures

“This other Lucy is nothing like the demure, sweet victim of the hagiographies or the pure, white vision I’ve just seen outside the cathedral. Instead, on 13 December, she is said to ride through the skies with a cavalcade of the dead, of ghosts and, sometimes, of children who died while still unbaptised. Going house to house with her terrifying entourage, she looks for the food that has been left out for her. If all is well, she’ll eat the offerings and bring good fortune in return, and if she encounters any good children on her way she gives them treats. But if the food offerings are incorrect or forgotten, and if Lucy finds that the tasks of the household – especially those related to weaving – have not been finished and laid aside for her celebration, she brings disorder, bad luck and death. If she finds children who have misbehaved, she’ll gut them, pull out their organs, stuff them full of straw, and sew them back up again. Sometimes she’s depicted holding a distaff with a child’s intestines twined around it, an impressive combining of the normally very separate interests of cloth-making and disembowelling.”
Sarah Clegg, The Dead of Winter: Beware the Krampus and Other Wicked Christmas Creatures

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