10 Wintery Reads To Snuggle Up With During A Snowstorm

A wintry mix of classics and should-be classics.
|
Open Image Modal
HPMG

We’re not convinced the ideal wintry read is cloyingly heart-warming, so we’ve picked out a few chilly books that may best be read while bundled up. 

Open Image Modal
Penguin

The Complete Fairy Tales by Hans Christian Andersen

Any reader of fairy tales knows Andersen’s responsible for the oppressively snowy scenes in “The Snow Queen,” the story of children Kai and Gerda, who must confront the goddess-like woman who controls all snowflakes after Kai is kidnapped. But Andersen’s most famous wintry tale isn’t his only story set during the chillier months. “The Shepherdess and the Chimney Sweep,” and “The Fire-Tree” are great choices for the holiday season.

Open Image Modal
Oni Press

Scott Pilgrim by Bryan Lee O’Malley

The freezing setting of the popular graphic novel series ― snowy, snowy Toronto ― is offset quickly by its gripping pace and cheeky jokes. Protagonist Scott is a little bit of a slacker, living in a tiny apartment and spending most days practicing with his band, Sex Bob-Omb. He’s bummed and heartbroken over a fellow musician, Envy, but sets his sights on someone new soon enough ― Ramona Flowers, who, suffice it to say, comes with some baggage. The movie is good, but the books are even better. Just don’t forget a parka.

Open Image Modal
W.W. Norton

Family Life by Akhil Sharma

It’s a beautiful yet tragic novel about an Indian family immigrating to America, only to face entirely new hardships. Among the Western novelties the narrator is exposed to ― grocery stores are a particular joy ― he’s wowed the most by snow, the slow, sporadic drifts falling on his face. Sharma’s novel isn’t entirely set in the wintertime, but his poetic descriptions of winter weather as lovely yet isolating make it a great choice for a December read.

Open Image Modal
McClelland

Stone Mattress by Margaret Atwood

In addition to writing ballsy books about the exploitation of women, Margaret Atwood tackles climate change and other environmental themes in her writing, too. A snowy dystopia serves as the setting for one of the stories in Stone Mattress, and the author deftly makes the apocalyptic scene a reality. As a speculative fiction writer, Atwood believes it’s her responsibility to imagine how current realities could worsen, and climate change is among the most dire issues.

Open Image Modal
HPMG

Frankenstein by Mary Shelley

Go ahead and forgo the bizarre movie adaptations that’ve been produced recently and read or re-read the classic itself. Bookended by narration by an explorer forging towards the North Pole, it’s a book as suited to wintertime as it is to Halloween. You know the story: a scientist driven by his ambition discovers a method for creating life, and spends two years cobbling together a living creature, who later resents him.

Open Image Modal
Harper

An American Childhood by Annie Dillard

Dillard’s first book is, as its title suggests, about her transition from being a self-centered child to being an adult more concerned with the world around her than with her own personal concerns. Her parents are key figures in the story, making it a fitting selection for those traveling home during the holidays. And, as a former resident of Pittsburgh, she chronicles the occasional snowfall. One notable scene takes place during what the author calls “a big snow,” in 1950. She writes, “The big snow outside, the big snow on the roofs, silenced our words and the scrape of our forks and our chairs.”

Open Image Modal
Bellevue Literary Press

Tinkers by Paul Harding

Harding’s novel is peppered with wistful descriptions of “wisps of snow,” “sweet and sharp.” It follows an old man, George Washington Crosby, back to his childhood in Maine, where harsh winters were the norm. George is a practiced clockmaker, and as he lies on his deathbed, he begins hallucinating about his earlier years and his father, who shared his line of work, but suffered from epilepsy. In his final days the two are able to reunite, in a hopeful story about the endurance of the human spirit amid hardships.

Open Image Modal
Vintage

The Secret History by Donna Tartt

The holidays are all about tradition, be it religious practices or goofy family outings. The narrator of The Secret History is obsessed with tradition, too, especially those that serve as identity markers, and those that might help him cover up his middle-class background while trying to get in with a group of students at a college in Vermont. A chunk of the novel is set during a chilly winter break, and the entire book has dramatic, Dionysian themes woven throughout.

Open Image Modal
Harper Perennial;

The Diaries of Sofia Tolstoy by Sofia Tolstoy

If you enjoyed Anna Karenina, that blustery book about a very unhappy family, you might find Sofia Tolstoy’s diaries worth a read. They’re not the coziest musings ― Sofia complains of sacrificing her own happiness for the take of her husband’s genius ― and in fact are pretty bleak at points. Her observations of daily life as a mother aren’t all dark, however: She recalls reading “Grimm’s fairy stories” on a snowy afternoon after sweeping a skating rink, and cuddling up with a Beethoven biography on a frosty evening. 

Open Image Modal
Penguin

Dubliners by James Joyce

James Joyce wins the award for most emotionally wrought snowy scene. His longish short story “The Dead” begins with the lighthearted dramas of an annual dinner party thrown by two sisters. There’s dancing, political conversation centered on Irish nationalism, and piano-playing. Afterward, narrator Gabriel is distressed to find that his wife is in a melancholic mood, and the tone of the story shifts swiftly as she recalls a lost loved one. As sad as the story is, it champions the beauty of daily life, too. 

 

Also on HuffPost:

Classic Book Gift Guide
For the little reader(01 of17)
Open Image Modal
If we were still young, we'd covet these colorful, meticulously designed editions of classics starring our favorite child heroines. Okay, we still kind of do. Puffin in Bloom is a line of classics featuring cover designs by Rifle Paper Co.'s lead designer Anna Bond, and they are appropriately adorable.

If there's a special little reader in your life you've been hoping to introduce to Anne and Jo, any one of these editions of Little Women, Heidi, A Little Princess and Anne of Green Gables (or the full set) would make an inspired gift.

Find at Rifle Paper Co.
(credit:Rifle Paper Co.)
For the young at heart(02 of17)
Open Image Modal
Lewis Carroll's Alice in Wonderland is one of the great children's classics, but even adults can't resist its magic. This year was the 150th anniversary of the book's publication, so there are some particularly gorgeous editions on offer. For a loved one who's all grown up, but still has a soft spot for the Mad Hatter and the Cheshire Cat, this beautiful and thorough Annotated Alice serves every function -- a nostalgic night on the couch, an adventure into the undiscovered backstory behind the well-worn tale, a coffee table accent piece, and a family favorite to pass down to future generations.

Find on Amazon.
(credit:Norton)
For the budding humorist(03 of17)
Open Image Modal
Austen is a staple of classrooms and book clubs, but if you know a teen or young adult reader with a keen appreciation of mordant social satire -- and a happy ending -- Pride and Prejudice is the ideal book gift. This edition, with a lively cover designed by artist Leanne Shapton, won't let you down on either count. From the reliable classics purveyor, Vintage, it features an intro from Alexander McCall Smith.

Find at Anthropologie.
(credit:Anthropologie)
For the troublemaker(04 of17)
Open Image Modal
Every little rebel and social misfit finds a kindred spirit in Twain's Huck Finn. Little about the life of a poor, troubled young boy in early 19th-century Missouri is whitewashed, even the dehumanization of slavery. While recent editions are sometimes bowdlerized to remove offensive language, this one remains faithful to the complete original text, showing every uncomfortable truth Twain revealed about the antebellum South. Twain speaks the language of rough-and-tumble young men, as much today as he did then, but there's plenty of substance buried within.

Find at UC Press.
(credit:University of California Press)
For the hopeless romantic(05 of17)
Open Image Modal
Hit three birds with one stone -- three of the most beloved Victorian novels of all time, that is. The most beloved book of each of the Brontë sisters are collected into this one volume from Penguin Classics. It's the perfect gift for a reader with a proclivity for long hours sniffling over romantic melodrama, because once you start with the Brontës, you won't want to stop.

Find at Amazon.
(credit:Penguin Classics)
For the Francophile(06 of17)
Open Image Modal
Everyone who's been seduced by the romance of French culture should read at least one Flaubert novel. Madame Bovary takes a rather dim view of some the pleasures and temptations we might associate with the culture, but it's a deeply humanizing and compelling tale of self-destruction. Don't just pick any copy, though -- a recent translation from Lydia Davis has won plaudits from all corners.

Find at Amazon.
(credit:Viking)
For the armchair psychologist(07 of17)
Open Image Modal
Eliot's sprawling masterpiece deals with relatively small events and people in an unassuming English town. Her genius for diving into the minds and hearts of each of her characters makes the work morally and psychologically profound, an ideal present for a loved one who likes to grapple with what makes other people tick. It's been said that novelists were the first psychologists, and Eliot is a prime example. This quirky edition boasts a foreword by Rebecca Mead, author of the lovely critical memoir My Life in Middlemarch -- accept no substitutes.

Find at Amazon.
(credit:Penguin Classics)
For the aspiring novelist(08 of17)
Open Image Modal
Joyce's first novel, and one deeply bound up in the anxieties of an aspiring artist seeking creative freedom and direction, is the novel every idealistic scribbler should have. Not quite as daunting as Ulysses, but packed with challenging techniques and stylistic experiments, it's sure to inspire a wordsmith. Edited by Hans Walter Gabler, who edited a highly controversial but still widely used edition of Ulysses, this Vintage edition is a solid pick.

Find at Barnes and Noble.
(credit:Vintage Classics)
For the swashbuckling adventurer(09 of17)
Open Image Modal
Alexandre Dumas wrote novels packed with swordplay, revenge, elaborate disguises and death-defying risks. For the friend or family member who, like Don Quixote, longs to live in a world governed by honor, duelling and feats of courage, The Count of Monte Cristo is the perfect steely-hearted novel of ruthless vengeance. Many editions of Dumas' classic make use of a subpar 19th-century translation, but this Penguin edition -- aside from being gorgeously designed by Coralie Bickford-Smith -- features the more up-to-date translation of Robin Buss, which is both more accessible and truer to the original.

Find at Barnes and Noble.
(credit:Penguin Classics)
For the very avid reader(10 of17)
Open Image Modal
Does your loved one have hours and hours -- days and days, even -- to spend lost in a book? Anna Karenina isn't for the faint of heart, or the five-minutes-a-day reader. If you have someone in your life you want to challenge, Tolstoy is always a good pick, and this celebrated new translation by Marian Schwartz, which is the first to "[embrace] Tolstoy’s unusual style." is the proper way to do it.

Find at Amazon.
(credit:Yale University Press)
For the social justice warrior(11 of17)
Open Image Modal
For the friend or family member who cares passionately about human rights, equality of opportunity, and the ongoing problem of social injustice, Baldwin's Notes of a Native Son is a must-read. This edition features an introduction by Edward P. Jones, the author of the Pulitzer Prize-winning The Known World. Baldwin's critical essays on race in literature, protest movements, identity and more were deeply of their moment, but also timeless, as relevant today as ever.

Find at Amazon.
(credit:Beacon Press)
For the independent-minded woman(12 of17)
Open Image Modal
If you have a young woman in your life going through a feminist enlightenment, or a friend who firmly espouses that a woman needs a man like a fish needs a bicycle, The Awakening, which portrays a young wife who feels lost and weighed down by her domestic life, is one of the unmissable reads. This striking paperback, with its bold black-and-white cover illustration and pages edged with black ink, also includes an introduction by no less than Barbara Kingsolver. This book was made for gifting.

Find at Books-A-Million.
(credit:Canongate)
For the serious feminist(13 of17)
Open Image Modal
This woman (or man!) on your list has covered bell hooks, Betty Friedan, Audre Lorde and Naomi Wolf. Maybe she's even read a few of these new feminist classics -- but there's bound to be something in this set for your most vocally anti-misogyny friend to love.

Find at n+1.
(credit:n 1)
For the easily distracted(14 of17)
Open Image Modal
Who has time to read a full novel these days? For your loved one whose attention span has shrunk to nothing thanks to Twitter and constant smartphone usage, maybe a short story is an easier lift. With this imposingly beautiful compendium, edited by short story magician Lorrie Moore, your gift recipient can sample stories chosen from 100 years of Best American Short Stories anthologies. In short: The best of the best.

Find at Amazon.
(credit:Houghton Mifflin Harcourt)
For the art lover(15 of17)
Open Image Modal
If your recipient resists books as clutter, but loves a pretty picture to hang on the wall, you can sneak a book into your gift, Trojan horse style! These pretty prints from Litographs (above, the poetry of Phyllis Wheatley and of William Wordsworth) use the text of a writer's work to create a representative image. The result is pretty enough to frame, and if your friend ever gets bored or curious, it's entirely legible as well!

Find at Litographs.
(credit:Litographs)
For the hipster(16 of17)
Open Image Modal
When it comes to classic literature, it's easy to collect a shelf full of the reliable standards. If there's someone in your life who wants a bookshelf that stands out a little more -- that seems, perhaps, a little more "in the know" or "under the radar" -- you might have to dig a little deeper. Enter Melville House, an indie publisher that makes a point of seeking out forgotten or under-appreciated classics. In their Art of the Novella series, which celebrates the not-quite-a-novel form, many of the novellas appear in standalone book form for the first time. Treat your loved one to a couple of these obscure classics, and one day she'll be able to sniff, "I read that before it became so popular."

Find at Melville House.
(credit:Melville House)
For the interior decorating fiend(17 of17)
Open Image Modal
If you have someone on your list who only buys green clothbound hardcovers (to match her living room color scheme) or who has purchased books by the yard (to fill his impressive-looking but untouched shelves), that doesn't mean you can't treat that person to a book! Print books can be works of art, and Penguin's Drop Caps series is another testament to that. A 26-book series, representing an author from each letter of the alphabet, the books showcase 26 stunning drop cap type designs from Jessica Hische. Plus, if you arrange them all in alphabetical order, they make a striking, unbroken color gradient. These aren't just books: they're books AND statement pieces.

Find at Penguin.
(credit:Penguin Classics)

Our 2024 Coverage Needs You

As Americans head to the polls in 2024, the very future of our country is at stake. At HuffPost, we believe that a free press is critical to creating well-informed voters. That's why our journalism is free for everyone, even though other newsrooms retreat behind expensive paywalls.

Our journalists will continue to cover the twists and turns during this historic presidential election. With your help, we'll bring you hard-hitting investigations, well-researched analysis and timely takes you can't find elsewhere. Reporting in this current political climate is a responsibility we do not take lightly, and we thank you for your support.

to keep our news free for all.

Support HuffPost