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Figuring out the Saddle Club...(long..but so irresistable!)

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  • <BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><font size="-1">quote:</font><HR>Originally posted by PaintedWhisper:
    Dreamsmom-I PTed you, i cant stand the suspense any longer!

    -Emily-
    "Not all who wander are lost"-J.R.R Tolkein
    http://community.webshots.com/user/uvgot2whisper
    <HR></BLOCKQUOTE>

    Check the PT, you have an answer!

    Comment


    • CdnRider:

      I remember A Horse Named Holiday! He was deaf, right, and wouldn't take ditches until he and his rider had to save a girl being dragged by her horse while hilltopping at a fox hunt. I was thinking of that book the other day.

      I also have read the English series you mention, but I can't for the life of me remember what it was called.
      Some nights I stay up cashing in my bad luck; some nights I call it a draw. -- fun.

      My favorite podcasts: Overdue, The Black Tapes, Tanis, Rabbits, How Did This Get Made?, Up and Vanished.

      Comment


      • Did anyone else read "Horsemasters?" It was about a group of students who were undergoing horsemaster certification, the different horses they rode & took care of (Corny P, SandPiper, Blue Trout, Pennant, more), lessons, etc. I loved it and read it so much I nearly memorized it.

        ~AJ~
        If you're big-star bound let me warn ya it's a long hard ride.
        “A clever person solves a problem. A wise person avoids it.”
        ? Albert Einstein

        ~AJ~

        Comment


        • Yep cllane1, that's the one. It does sound corny with that synopsis though!! Oh well I still liked the book.

          Comment


          • Hi EventerAJ - Horsemasters is by Don Sanford and Disney made it into a movie by the same name. You can still find an old copy on ebay every once in awhile.

            Rose

            Comment


            • My favourite Saddle Club book was the one where the girls got to compete at Briarwood. Lisa talks everybody into letter her show Prancer (who was just off the racetrack), only to have it be a disaster.

              I liked 'Photo Finish' as well. (The one about racing)
              I loved Gold Medal Horse/Rider, but only because I was a little Pony Club kid who dreamed of riding in the Olympics.

              Only read the first four 'Thoroughbred' books. To me the series was about Ashleigh and Wonder.

              Other favourites of a used-bookstore-frequenting horse crazy kid:
              --Pony in the field (girl dreams of getting horse, gets Shetland pony instead)
              --Keeping Barney (loved this one; featured girl taking care of stubborn half-Morgan)
              --Dancer, by Shelley Peterson
              --Galloping Detective, though I only read the one in which the heroine dreams of riding the star horse, and ends up with half-blind reject whom she names Second Chance.

              I miss my innocence...

              ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
              The next best thing to playing and winning is playing and losing
              ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
              "I know nothing with any certainty, but the sight of stars makes me dream." --Vincent Van Gogh

              Comment


              • CdnRider: I love "A Horse Called Holiday" as well. I meant to post about it, but couldn't come up with the title. I still always cry when I read the end of that book.

                ~*Kate*~
                Tufts Equestrian Team "We'll Ride Anything"
                ~*Kate*~
                Tufts Equestrian Team \"We\'ll Ride Anything\"

                Comment


                • Grrr...this thread inspired me so much that I went to my local library to find some of these classics. Unfortunately I came away empty handed. They need to start a lending library service for horse books. I used to have tons, and got rid of them as I got older, and now I'm dying to read them again!
                  Some nights I stay up cashing in my bad luck; some nights I call it a draw. -- fun.

                  My favorite podcasts: Overdue, The Black Tapes, Tanis, Rabbits, How Did This Get Made?, Up and Vanished.

                  Comment

                  • Original Poster

                    Inspired by tales of there being OTHER series than the SC, I took myself to our local used booksstore, and came home with at leat bits of the following series:

                    Rebel of Dark Creek (quite good! copy is autographed, so hubby is aking me KEEP it ) For anyone who finds it, it is worth it alone for the young girl who moves her new pony to the "Old Lady" stable Riding Academy

                    And also saw
                    Silver Stirrups
                    Short Stirrup Club
                    Pony Pals
                    some bizarre British series that may have been the one about how all the riding school horses were rescues
                    some type of horse detective series (may have been Galloping..whatever)
                    Black Stallion
                    Pullein sisters series (there weren't any there when I went, just a collection of stories by one of the sisters)
                    and at least two other series!!!

                    Plus, yes, I had all those corny Scholastic series and singles, Thoroughbred, Bonny, Horse Called Holiday, A Pony of Her Own, Hopscotch, Summer/winter Pony, Wild/WildRose/etc Pony, Afraid to Ride, Charlie, Pony Stories series, Horse Stories series, Kit Hunter series, God only knows how any other kids books went through my hands down to local riding school kids (often also by way of my young adult riders!!)


                    Call us a bookclub of Children's Horse Stories for Adults!!

                    sittin on the dock of the bay...

                    Comment

                    • Original Poster

                      Rebel of Dark Creek,
                      by Nikki Tate,

                      was one I mentioned aboove, which shows humerous insight into childhood by the author, take a look at this, from the book (from the child, thinking of her fellow boarder attending the same little schooling show, an 'old lady' in her 40s who eventually wins the division):

                      <BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><font size="-1">quote:</font><HR> She hoped Marjorie wasn't going to have hot flashes or a heart attack or anything with all the excitement of the big horse show.. <HR></BLOCKQUOTE>

                      That is just too funny. How can you not like a kid's book like that!!

                      sittin on the dock of the bay...

                      Comment


                      • This isn't about the saddle club, but I remember reading a book called "Pony Jobs for Jill" when I was a kid. It was about a teenager who had finished school (in England) and wanted to work with horses. I think she went through a number of temp jobs before she decided the sensible thing to do was get training for a proper job. She decided to go to secretarial school, much to her mother's relief.

                        Tosca

                        Comment


                        • Did anyone else read the books by B. Morgenroth (sp?) they were for an older more horse-knowledgable audience...teenage probably. I have two that I love, "Ride a Proud Horse" and "Last Junior Year" I wanted to read some of the other ones but they're all out of print. The pages on mine are falling out, b/c I got them secondhand, so I have to be careful not to lose a page!

                          "can't act. can't sing....can dance a little."
                          Notes from Fred Astaire's Audition

                          Comment


                          • One thing always annoyed the heck out of me with the SC books--WHY did they have to use the entire first chapter of every book to introduce the characters and settings? It was a series! If you couldn't figure out who, what, and where after book 10...!

                            ~This is *way* more fun than doing something productive~
                            ~This is *way* more fun than doing something productive~

                            Comment


                            • [QUOTE]Originally posted by stasha:
                              One thing always annoyed the heck out of me with the SC books--WHY did they have to use the entire first chapter of every book to introduce the characters and settings? It was a series! If you couldn't figure out who, what, and where after book 10...!
                              QUOTE]
                              This is so true!! After I'd read a couple I could basically recite what the first chapter would say, and the phrases it would use to say it. "There were only two rules to being in the Saddle Club, you had to be able to help out each other at any time....Oh and by the way Carol's Mom died" LOL I guess she did it so you didn't have to start at book 1 if you didn't want to.

                              Comment

                              • Original Poster

                                Re: the repitition, I was told it was some type of style the kids related to. Some technique or another.. gully's or another writer could maybe expand on that. I guess that is why they are perpetually 12 (and I revise my earlier amazement at Carole nad Veronica riding the stallion at age 8, since time did not pass, they were obviously the much more mature and responsible age of 12!!!)

                                Jill and her series! I forgot those. Jill Has Two Ponies, Jill's Gymkhana etc etc

                                sittin on the dock of the bay...

                                Comment


                                • I never liked the Saddle Club books but I loved the Galloping Detective series. I really wish that there had been more of those books.

                                  As for barns with wooden floors, I boarded at one once. It wasn't bad, I loved the sound it made underneath the horses hooves!!!

                                  __________________________________________________ __________
                                  **"You are under arrest for operating your mouth under the influence of
                                  ignorance!" MPD Officer Beck
                                  **"Member of the COTH Law Enforcement clique!"
                                  **"Member of the Western clique"

                                  "You are under arrest for operating your mouth under the influence of
                                  ignorance!" Officer Beck

                                  Comment


                                  • <BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><font size="-1">quote:</font><HR>Jill and her series! I forgot those. Jill Has Two Ponies, Jill's Gymkhana etc etc <HR></BLOCKQUOTE>

                                    Oh my Onyx: I LOVED these books when I was a kid....and I didn't even ride then!! I stayed up last night after digging out "Jill's Gymkhana" and laughed like an idiot the whole time. Especially, when she is told to "not lift your bum out of the saddle over jumps, as you will just flop on your pony's back when you come down and hurt him".......priceless. Can you imagine what GM would say??

                                    "Don't bother me; I'm living happily ever after!"

                                    Go Ahead: This is a dare, not permission. Don't Do It!

                                    Comment


                                    • Can anyone give me the author of the "Blue Ribbon" series? I had a couple of them but I was never able to get the full series--and now I want to read them again! But I'm having trouble finding them...

                                      A friend and I had a trade agreement--I would buy the SC books & she would buy the Babysitters Club books. I think we kept up to about #15 on the SC books (then she moved away). I read a few more SC books, but then kind of lost interest.

                                      Thanks, Becky

                                      Comment


                                      • The first chapter had to lay out the basics, every time, so that a kid could start at #97 and know who these characters were. The big problem always comes to a head by chapter 8, chapter 11 is the crisis, 12 the resolution, and 13 a short half-chapter where the 3 girls talk about the lessons they learned.

                                        EXCEPT in my personal favorite, Riding Class, where the last chapter is about something else too.

                                        I'm amazed--gratified, but amazed, astonished, flummoxed--that anybody remembers those Gold Medal books fondly. Good! Glad trees didn't die for no reason.

                                        Comment


                                        • You wrote the Gold Medal books?

                                          Those were by far the best!!!!

                                          I read them each about 12 times before I went to the Rolex at age 12.

                                          Do I dare
                                          Disturb the universe?
                                          -T.S. Eliot

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