• Welcome to the Chronicle Forums.
    Please complete your profile. The forums and the rest of www.chronofhorse.com has single sign-in, so your log in information for one will automatically work for the other. Disclaimer: The opinions expressed here are the views of the individual and do not necessarily reflect the views and opinions of The Chronicle of the Horse.

Announcement

Collapse

Forum rules and no-advertising policy

As a participant on this forum, it is your responsibility to know and follow our rules. Please read this message in its entirety.

Board Rules

1. You’re responsible for what you say.
As outlined in Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, The Chronicle of the Horse and its affiliates, as well Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd., the developers of vBulletin, are not legally responsible for statements made in the forums.

This is a public forum viewed by a wide spectrum of people, so please be mindful of what you say and who might be reading it—details of personal disputes are likely better handled privately. While posters are legally responsible for their statements, the moderators may in their discretion remove or edit posts that violate these rules. Users have the ability to modify or delete their own messages after posting, but administrators generally will not delete posts, threads or accounts upon request.

Outright inflammatory, vulgar, harassing, malicious or otherwise inappropriate statements and criminal charges unsubstantiated by a reputable news source or legal documentation will not be tolerated and will be dealt with at the discretion of the moderators.

Credible threats of suicide will be reported to the police along with identifying user information at our disposal, in addition to referring the user to suicide helpline resources such as 1-800-SUICIDE or 1-800-273-TALK.

2. Conversations in horse-related forums should be horse-related.
The forums are a wonderful source of information and support for members of the horse community. While it’s understandably tempting to share information or search for input on other topics upon which members might have a similar level of knowledge, members must maintain the focus on horses.

3. Keep conversations productive, on topic and civil.
Discussion and disagreement are inevitable and encouraged; personal insults, diatribes and sniping comments are unproductive and unacceptable. Whether a subject is light-hearted or serious, keep posts focused on the current topic and of general interest to other participants of that thread. Utilize the private message feature or personal email where appropriate to address side topics or personal issues not related to the topic at large.

4. No advertising in the discussion forums.
Posts in the discussion forums directly or indirectly advertising horses, jobs, items or services for sale or wanted will be removed at the discretion of the moderators. Use of the private messaging feature or email addresses obtained through users’ profiles for unsolicited advertising is not permitted.

Company representatives may participate in discussions and answer questions about their products or services, or suggest their products on recent threads if they fulfill the criteria of a query. False "testimonials" provided by company affiliates posing as general consumers are not appropriate, and self-promotion of sales, ad campaigns, etc. through the discussion forums is not allowed.

Paid advertising is available on our classifieds site and through the purchase of banner ads. The tightly monitored Giveaways forum permits free listings of genuinely free horses and items available or wanted (on a limited basis). Items offered for trade are not allowed.

Advertising Policy Specifics
When in doubt of whether something you want to post constitutes advertising, please contact a moderator privately in advance for further clarification. Refer to the following points for general guidelines:

Horses – Only general discussion about the buying, leasing, selling and pricing of horses is permitted. If the post contains, or links to, the type of specific information typically found in a sales or wanted ad, and it’s related to a horse for sale, regardless of who’s selling it, it doesn’t belong in the discussion forums.

Stallions – Board members may ask for suggestions on breeding stallion recommendations. Stallion owners may reply to such queries by suggesting their own stallions, only if their horse fits the specific criteria of the original poster. Excessive promotion of a stallion by its owner or related parties is not permitted and will be addressed at the discretion of the moderators.

Services – Members may use the forums to ask for general recommendations of trainers, barns, shippers, farriers, etc., and other members may answer those requests by suggesting themselves or their company, if their services fulfill the specific criteria of the original post. Members may not solicit other members for business if it is not in response to a direct, genuine query.

Products – While members may ask for general opinions and suggestions on equipment, trailers, trucks, etc., they may not list the specific attributes for which they are in the market, as such posts serve as wanted ads.

Event Announcements – Members may post one notification of an upcoming event that may be of interest to fellow members, if the original poster does not benefit financially from the event. Such threads may not be “bumped” excessively. Premium members may post their own notices in the Event Announcements forum.

Charities/Rescues – Announcements for charitable or fundraising events can only be made for 501(c)(3) tax-exempt organizations. Special exceptions may be made, at the moderators’ discretion and direction, for board-related events or fundraising activities in extraordinary circumstances.

Occasional posts regarding horses available for adoption through IRS-registered horse rescue or placement programs are permitted in the appropriate forums, but these threads may be limited at the discretion of the moderators. Individuals may not advertise or make announcements for horses in need of rescue, placement or adoption unless the horse is available through a recognized rescue or placement agency or government-run entity or the thread fits the criteria for and is located in the Giveaways forum.

5. Do not post copyrighted photographs unless you have purchased that photo and have permission to do so.

6. Respect other members.
As members are often passionate about their beliefs and intentions can easily be misinterpreted in this type of environment, try to explore or resolve the inevitable disagreements that arise in the course of threads calmly and rationally.

If you see a post that you feel violates the rules of the board, please click the “alert” button (exclamation point inside of a triangle) in the bottom left corner of the post, which will alert ONLY the moderators to the post in question. They will then take whatever action, or no action, as deemed appropriate for the situation at their discretion. Do not air grievances regarding other posters or the moderators in the discussion forums.

Please be advised that adding another user to your “Ignore” list via your User Control Panel can be a useful tactic, which blocks posts and private messages by members whose commentary you’d rather avoid reading.

7. We have the right to reproduce statements made in the forums.
The Chronicle of the Horse may copy, quote, link to or otherwise reproduce posts, or portions of posts, in print or online for advertising or editorial purposes, if attributed to their original authors, and by posting in this forum, you hereby grant to The Chronicle of the Horse a perpetual, non-exclusive license under copyright and other rights, to do so.

8. We reserve the right to enforce and amend the rules.
The moderators may delete, edit, move or close any post or thread at any time, or refrain from doing any of the foregoing, in their discretion, and may suspend or revoke a user’s membership privileges at any time to maintain adherence to the rules and the general spirit of the forum. These rules may be amended at any time to address the current needs of the board.

Please see our full Terms of Service and Privacy Policy for more information.

Thanks for being a part of the COTH forums!

(Revised 2/8/18)
See more
See less

I need the author and title of a book . . .

Collapse
This topic is closed.
X
X
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • LoriO, it's about a girl (natch! ) who visits her aunt who lives on a lake for the summer, but the town is spooked by this creepy howling hound and red light and she finds a horse -- and a boy or two -- and falls in love with the horse only the mare is owned by a mean old lady who everyone's scared of and still the hound howls....

    But for the LIFE OF ME I cannot remember why the crimson light-bathed hound was howling! Guess I'll have to force myself to go back to the hauntings of my childhood.

    ***** I muck, therefore I am. *****
    Congratulate me! My CANTER cutie is an honor student at Goofball University!

    Comment


    • maggymay

      One ground of criticism is that her language is thought too simplistic, so it doesn't develop reading skills. But then, if you are 5 or 6 years old, I think enjoying reading rather than expanding one's vocabulary is more important.

      She is also not very PC. There's a lot of unconscious racism peppering the books (villains tend to be 'swarthy' for example), plus an old fashioned view of a girl's/woman's place in life (although George was an exception of course), and of course every one knew their station in life. The books were of their time.

      I expect any editions out now have been greatly re-written.

      I remember one Secret Seven book where a French boy comes to stay - it is not a flattering portrait of the French! I did get hold of a French version of the story, and surprise, surprise, the unwelcome visitor is English!

      It was fun to do a comparison between the two.

      Comment


      • I went bananas on amazon.com Monday and ordered a boatload of books--in yesterday's mail came Can I Get there by Candlelight? which I reread cover to cover last night, and Take Care of Dexter, by Clyde Robert Bulla. In the latter you won't find any fancy hunters or jumpers, A-circuit riders, or palatial horse farms, but what a well-written, touching story--and the illustrations complement the story perfectly in both style and content. I probably hadn't picked up this book in twenty years, and I think I appreciate it more now than when I first read it.

        Comment


        • Didn't Enid Blyton write the "Noddy" books?

          Janet
          chief feeder and mucker for Music, Spy, Belle, and Brain
          Janet

          chief feeder and mucker for Music, Spy, Belle and Tiara. Someone else is now feeding and mucking for Chief and Brain (both foxhunting now).

          Comment


          • It's amazing to open up a book you remember but haven't seen in decades--like stepping back in time, if only for a moment. >>>>> Oh how absolutely true ~!!! What a great thread this is. Always nice to find out you aren't the only one <G> I managed to find TAM THE UNTAMED at a used book seller..... very interesting to remember how it affected me as a youth and then to read it again as an adult.

            Comment


            • I just received the copy of The Crumb that I ordered and realized that I have been combining its plot with the plot of some other books. Eesh. I kept muttereing "so that was THIS book? Amazing."

              LoriO, congratulations on A Very Young Rider. I absolutely loved that book and am so glad I never got rid of it, or the kajillion other horse books I had. I just wish they were still readily available so that kids today could enjoy them.
              Keith: "Now...let's do something normal fathers and daughters do."
              Veronica: "Buy me a pony?"

              Comment


              • When I was younger I collected the Dutch versions of the German bookseries called "Bille und Zottel" about a girl who trains with a top showjumper, they were a lot of fun to read! Some of the old versions have really cool drawings of showjumpers too.

                Comment


                • Darn. My Impossible Quest book wasn't "Smuggler's Road". Wrong era.

                  Anyone who would like to help again: my Impossible Quest is to find an old book that had once belonged to my mother that I read as a child. No one can remember the title or author, of course...But, the story is about a boy living in Sacramento, Ca. after the Gold Rush. He's saving his money ($100) to buy a saddle, for his grandmother will buy him a horse if he does. He ends up capturing a group of thieves/swindlers and getting a $100 reward, of course. It has great descriptions of the Tule fog here ("So thick you can hammer a nail in it and hang up your coat") and mentions the underground sidewalks. Good story. I'd sure like to read it again. Mom bought it in the fifties, says it probably was a Weekly Reader. They wouldn't happen to have a list of the books they published then?
                  Don't tell me about what you can't do. That's boring. Show me what you can do. - Mom

                  Comment


                  • So we know about mining amazon.co.uk for books, but is it possible that there are other places we should be looking for neat stories? I'd love to read german horse books... well, except that my german isn't nearly good enough for anything more than toddler-level.

                    OK, but I have a toddler! So I don't suppose anyone can recommend a nice horsey picture book in german, so we can both work on our language skills? Surely there must be at least book called "Schwarzes Pferd" ?

                    Emryss, Weekly Reader has a web page at http://www.weeklyreader.com/. Couldn't hurt to contact them - at worst they'll just tell you to go away. I love stories like that with a strong sense of place.
                    If you are allergic to a thing, it is best not to put that thing in your mouth, particularly if the thing is cats. - Lemony Snicket

                    Comment


                    • EMRYSS! I FOUND IT!!

                      http://www.usedbookcentral.com/texis...,jump,160.html

                      Scroll down to "The Ghost on Saturday Night" by Sid Fleishman and Eric Von Schmidt:

                      <BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><font size="-1">quote:</font><HR>When Opie gets tickets to a Saturday evening play about a ghost, he and his Great Aunt Etta go together through the thick California tule fog. But it turns out the play is a way to rob the town instead, and Opie and Great Aunt Etta help save the day! Opie takes his rewards and buys a saddle for the horse his aunt promises to buy.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>

                      From the Weekly Reader bookclub. On this particular page, they have a copy for $10.95.
                      If you are allergic to a thing, it is best not to put that thing in your mouth, particularly if the thing is cats. - Lemony Snicket

                      Comment


                      • <BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><font size="-1">quote:</font><HR>Originally posted by equescool:
                        It's amazing to open up a book you remember but haven't seen in decades--like stepping back in time, if only for a moment. &gt;&gt;&gt;&gt;&gt; Oh how absolutely true ~!!! What a great thread this is. Always nice to find out you aren't the only one &lt;G&gt; <HR></BLOCKQUOTE>

                        Equescool, that is exactly why I ended up with my horse book collection. My mom was moving so I flew home one weekend to go through some stuff and found some of my old books. I started reading them and the memories that just came flooding back!!! Next thing I knew I was haunting the used book stores and flea markets looking for all the old books I remembered and ones I had never read before. So what if I'm 35 years old!! I LOVE reading all these old kids books again. I'm waiting patiently (NOT!) for A Very Young Rider to arrive.

                        RugBug, the Crumb is another wonderful Doty book. I feel so bad when she loses The Crumb but at least she gets Cat Burglar to help make up and ease the loss!

                        "Member of the Western clique"

                        All gave some...And some gave all...God bless the USA
                        "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>Originally posted by poltroon:
                          cheeky_appy, what is the proper sequence (and each title) of the Jinny books?

                          There are a bunch of Patricia Leitch books marked as "Horseshoes #n" - on one hand, I think if she wrote it it's worth trying, but on the other hand, most of these little-girls-with-horses series have been pretty terrible, and I'm left wondering if the publishers think that's required for the series to be successful. <HR></BLOCKQUOTE>

                          1. For Love of a Horse
                          2. A Devil to Ride
                          3. The Summer Riders
                          4. Night of the Red Horse
                          5. Gallop to the Hills.
                          6. HOrse in a Million
                          7. The Magic Pony
                          8. Ride Like the Wind
                          9. Chestnut Gold
                          10. Jump for the Moon
                          11. HOrse of Fire
                          12. Running Wild

                          I am desperately seeking books 9-12 to complete my collection by the way!

                          ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
                          Aim 2003/2004: National High points for appaloosa show jumping!
                          ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
                          If a car passes me when I\'m on a horse, I always think: if I were in that car and saw me, I would wish I was me. Wistful children\'s faces, staring out of the back window, agree - Monica Dickens

                          Comment


                          • <BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><font size="-1">quote:</font><HR>Originally posted by LoriO:
                            <BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><font size="-1">quote:</font><HR>Originally posted by equescool:
                            It's amazing to open up a book you remember but haven't seen in decades--like stepping back in time, if only for a moment. &gt;&gt;&gt;&gt;&gt; Oh how absolutely true ~!!! What a great thread this is. Always nice to find out you aren't the only one &lt;G&gt; <HR></BLOCKQUOTE>

                            Equescool, that is exactly why I ended up with my horse book collection. My mom was moving so I flew home one weekend to go through some stuff and found some of my old books. I started reading them and the memories that just came flooding back!!! Next thing I knew I was haunting the used book stores and flea markets looking for all the old books I remembered and ones I had never read before. So what if I'm 35 years old!! I LOVE reading all these old kids books again. I'm waiting patiently (NOT!) for A Very Young Rider to arrive.

                            RugBug, the Crumb is another wonderful Doty book. I feel so bad when she loses The Crumb but at least she gets Cat Burglar to help make up and ease the loss!

                            "Member of the Western clique"

                            All gave some...And some gave all...God bless the USA<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>

                            I am proud to say that Equescool was quoting an earlier post of mine (the stepping back in time thing) in the first sentence of her post (thanks Equescool--that gave me a little thrill).

                            Even though it offends my amateur-collector sensibilities a little, I am anal about buying the book in the same form I knew it when I first read it. If my long-lost childhood copy of Summer Pony was paperback, when I buy the book again I want the paperback again. And if a title had different editions with different cover art, I want the one with the same cover art I remember from way back when.

                            Comment


                            • Sorry about that Windsor!!! Kudos to you for that quote then!

                              "Member of the Western clique"

                              All gave some...And some gave all...God bless the USA
                              "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>Originally posted by LoriO:
                                Sorry about that Windsor!!! Kudos to you for that quote then!

                                "Member of the Western clique"

                                All gave some...And some gave all...God bless the USA<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>

                                LoriO, please don't apologize--now I feel like a jerk!
                                Thanks for the kudos, though.

                                We are on the exact same quest--amassing the book collections we had as kids. I started out just wanting the C.W. Anderson books I once checked out of my school libraries, but in the last few months have been trying to remember (and buy) pretty much all of the long-forgotten horsey books of my youth (and I'm almost 33 now), so we're in the same boat.

                                I must warn you--ours is a highly addictive (but FUN) pastime!

                                Comment


                                • Well, since poltroon was able to find Emryss's Impossible Quest book, perhaps you all know the author of MY impossible quest: a book called Three Frisky Fillies? About a young girl with some family issues who is comforted by the magic of horses (or some such nonsense)?

                                  .................................................. .................................................. ......
                                  "Whether you think you can or think you can't - you are right." -Henry Ford
                                  "Whether you think you can or think you can't, you are right." -Henry Ford

                                  Comment

                                  • Original Poster

                                    I am not so much dropping in to offer any useful information but rather to exult, "Bwahahahahahahaha!!!!!!! I started a thread that has gone on for 11 pages and has 200 replies!"

                                    I apologize for the interruption. Do carry on .

                                    Cheers,
                                    Susie
                                    http://www.kachoom.com

                                    "That's it! You people have stood in my way long enough. I'm going to clown college!" ~Homer Simpson
                                    "That's it! You people have stood in my way long enough. I'm going to clown college!" ~Homer Simpson

                                    Comment


                                    • <BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><font size="-1">quote:</font><HR>
                                      And if a title had different editions with different cover art, I want the one with the same cover art I remember from way back when.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>

                                      I don't mind upgrading to hardback, but I too really feel the need for cover art (and title) that matches my memory!
                                      If you are allergic to a thing, it is best not to put that thing in your mouth, particularly if the thing is cats. - Lemony Snicket

                                      Comment


                                      • For those of you looking for books here are two sites that will get you in lots of trouble.

                                        www.abebooks.com

                                        www.alibris.com
                                        www.HistoricHousePreservation.com

                                        Comment


                                        • Dang it Windsor, don't make me apologize for making you fell bad that I apologized!!

                                          It is so addicting!!! My husband just shakes his head when I come home with a new book that I've found!

                                          I think I mentined this one on another thread but one of my latest finds ia a wonderful old horse book called Greylight. The book is told from the point of view of the Shetland pony Greylight and his experiences in his new home. What a wonderful book it is! Found it at a tag sale for 50 cents I think. The book is from the 1920's or 30's if I remember right.

                                          "Member of the Western clique"

                                          All gave some...And some gave all...God bless the USA
                                          "You are under arrest for operating your mouth under the influence of
                                          ignorance!" Officer Beck

                                          Comment

                                          Working...
                                          X