Huddersfield Daily Examiner

I pinch myself when I think tradition has become such

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WHEN I say we didn’t have two pennies to rub together, that would be generous. We were broke. The family business, a small steel fabricatio­n company, wasn’t doing well, and it was having a knock-on effect on us all.

A couple of days a week, I’d leave my husband at home and drive the two-hour trip to my parents’ house in Atlanta, Georgia, to help my dad with the business.

That way, I could take my three-year-old son Taylor to work with me, and stay the night with them to spend some time with my mum.

She was living in a perfect storm of problems : worried about money and the family business, and also

recovering It has been the biggest Christmas craze of the past few years. Here reveals her heartwarmi­ng family story behind Elf On The Shelf from health problems.

One night as I cast about for an idea to cheer Mum up, I caught sight of our family elf sitting high on a shelf. Christmas had always been a big deal in our house, and Mum went the extra mile to make sure it was special for us.

Fisbee the elf sat on the shelf, keeping watch over me and my siblings, and each night Mum told us he’d fly back to the North Pole and tell Santa whether we’d been naughty or nice. In the morning, he’d return but he’d always land in a different spot in the house.

Running around the house trying to find Fisbee was honestly the most exciting part of the holidays.

“Mum, we should write a children’s book about Fisbee together,” I told her, and she loved the idea. Neither of us had ever done anything like it before – she worked in advertisin­g

before becoming a home-maker, and I’d been an English teacher at a middle school.

At first it was just a fun way to spend an evening together.

GETTING CREATIVE

ONE night a week for about six months, I’d rush home from working with Dad, put Taylor down to sleep, and Mum and I would sit together at the kitchen table or curled up on the couch. It was a lot of fun toying with rhyme and rhythm pattern, exploring the best way to get our family tradition down on paper.

Once we’d finished, we both realised we were onto something pretty special that we wanted to share with the world. But we were clueless about what to do next, so we bought a book about how to get published, wrote a proposal and sent a few manuscript­s out.

A day and a half later, we got a call from an agent who said she loved ‘Elf On The Shelf ’ and wanted to take us on. We were ecstatic, and really thought we’d made it. But it wasn’t to be. The agent took our story to just about every publisher, big and small, over seven months and nobody wanted to publish it.

Mum and I felt a little dejected, but we still felt so sure we needed to carry on, so much so, we decided to go down the

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