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

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  • Kachoo ROCKS for starting this thread! I'm going to be at the library tonight!

    Does anyone remember a series where the heroine's name is Kerry, and she gets a job taking care of a handicapped girl named Holly who owns a horse named Magician, and Kerry rides Magician for her? The spoiled rich girl (the Veronica DiAngelo, for all you Saddle Club fans) is named Whitney and she rides a horse named Astronaut. Does ANYONE remember what these books are called? Every once in a while something reminds me of them and I make myself crazy trying to remember the title.

    P.S. Whoever came up with The Winning of Dark Boy, THANK YOU, that was another one I was trying to remember And For Love of A Horse, is that really a series? I'm so excited!

    "There is no snooze button on a cat who wants breakfast." -- Anonymous

    \"There is no snooze button on a cat who wants breakfast.\" -- Anonymous

    Comment


    • Another VERY vague plot memory. Young girl is evacuated to the US (during WWII) and stays with family friends (maybe distant relatives) who run a riding stable. I don't remember whether she already knew how to ride or not, but she learns to ride much better. There is a fiar amount of rivalry between the heroine and the child (I think a son, but not sure) of the family she is staying with.

      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


      • For all of you frustrated pre-teens, there are two threads in the Favorites section of the archives on this topic.

        And I know they are more detailed because, so far NO ONE has mentioned my favorite three books:

        Pamela and the Blue Mare

        Challenger

        Hobby Horse Hill

        The first two are the most realistic books I can remember as a riding kid --- both involve teens and horse shows.

        And the third one was my dream as a kid -- having a farm with horses on it and being able to just run out and ride any time I felt like it. ~~~~~~ Wait! I now live on a farm with horses and I CAN run out and ride any time I feel like it! Wowser! I am living my childhood dream!

        So, if your favorite book has not yet been mentioned in this thread, check out this link:
        Favorite Books From Way Back When

        (This is my first attempt at posting a link. Hope it works....)

        Waaaaa. How come everyone else's links show up in blue and mine shows up in brown? (although I am VERY proud that it takes you to the old thread )

        ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
        I CAN spell, I just can't type and I am too blind to proofread InfoPop's teeny tiny font.

        [This message was edited by Lord Helpus on Aug. 08, 2003 at 01:52 PM.]

        [This message was edited by Lord Helpus on Aug. 08, 2003 at 02:00 PM.]
        "He lives in a cocoon of solipsism"

        Charles Krauthammer speaking about Trump

        Comment


        • Challenger, Challenger, yesyesyes!!! I didn't mention it only b/c I was never able to find a copy of my own and it's been decades since I lived near a library that had it. But oh yes - best Patsey Gray book IMHO!!

          ______________
          The TB body slave formerly known as Lizviola.
          "The standard you walk by is the standard you accept."--Lt. Gen. David Morrison, Austalian Army Chief

          Comment


          • If the link is in brown, it means you've followed it recently.

            For Love of a Horse, by Patricia Leitch, has other books following "Jinny". The ones I know about (may not be in the right order)

            The Summer Riders
            The Magic Pony
            Gallop to the Hills

            These may be duplicate titles??:

            Night of the Red Horse
            Ride Like The Wind
            Horse of Fire
            Horse in a Million
            A Devil to Ride
            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:
              Does anyone remember Silver Birch? It was the name of the book and also the name of the mare in the book - a wild, white mare in the birches.

              <HR></BLOCKQUOTE>

              That's the first of the Dorothy Lyons books. The only one I've never read and haven't been able to find. I just had to make up what happened wtih Silver Birch and Connie so that I could move on to Midnight Moon, etc.

              Lord Helpus: I mentioned Hobby Horse Hill on a thread like this one about two weeks ago. I didn't remember the plot very well, but I definitely remember loving it.

              For some reason, even though this thread is a repeat from a recent one, I can't keep myself from replying.

              I just got "Show Rider" by Lynn Haney in the mail today...off of a recommendation here. The crumb is on it's way...
              Keith: "Now...let's do something normal fathers and daughters do."
              Veronica: "Buy me a pony?"

              Comment


              • I dug out more of my horse book collection over the weekend, and I found two that I don't even remember reading... one is Keep a Silver Dollar and one is Mayfly, a Pony. And, I ordered a couple of old books online. So good reading for me this week!

                (Except I'm supposed to be having LESS stuff, not MORE stuff! It's all the COTH BB's fault! )

                I've been adding cover photos to the horse fiction database. For the out-of-print ones, I'm just photographing the copies I have as I dig them out of the garage. If anyone wants to submit other cover photos, there's a feedback form on the website - contact me and I can give you instructions.

                I was planning to reorganize the horse books into a single cleverly marked box in the garage (we are somewhat limited on bookshelf space at the moment). And then I realized how silly that was, and instead rotated a bunch of non-horse books into the garage and put all the horse books on display.
                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


                • Has no one else read the Phantom Horse series then? :P http://www.countrybookshop.co.uk/cgi...hantom+Horse+S.

                  Oh, just thought of another one... "Dancer" .. loved it when I was in grade six. LOL. Just a bit on the unrealistic side (teen girl competes in grand prix showjumping and is asked to ride for the queen.. bit of a mystery with someone trying to steal and/or kill the horse, and so forth...)
                  http://www.amazon.ca/exec/obidos/ASI...207907-1255208

                  oh, and here's a horsey bookstore site:
                  http://horseforum.com/books/book4.htm

                  - To Ride A Horse Is To Borrow Freedom -
                  - To Ride A Horse Is To Borrow Freedom -

                  Comment


                  • <BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><font size="-1">quote:</font><HR>Originally posted by sbt78lw:

                    Another favorite of mine is "Beauty" by Bill Wallace. It has some gut-wrenching moments, but it's a great story full of wit and humor, and it DOES have a good ending.
                    <HR></BLOCKQUOTE>

                    Oh I LOFFED that one too!! I read it so many times the cover was worn off.

                    I was also a big Marguerite Henry fan. Read the whole Misty trilogy, plus "Brighty", Mustang (Wild Spirit of the West), Santo Domingo, Born to Trot, Black Gold, etc. I remember in 5th grade we were assigned to read "King of the Wind"...I'd already read it three times by then. And the stupid teacher kept insisting that the BOY, Agba, was the main character. NOOOO, the HORSE, Sham, was the main character!! Sheesh!

                    ~AJ~
                    I've been there...that's why I'm here.
                    “A clever person solves a problem. A wise person avoids it.”
                    ? Albert Einstein

                    ~AJ~

                    Comment


                    • <BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><font size="-1">quote:</font><HR>Originally posted by purryprowly:
                      Oh Kachoo I too go through those phases... glad I'm not the only one. Instead of Jolly Ranchers, I make a hot cup of tea and burrow under the bed covers. I'm not anti-social, really I'm not!

                      Can I recommend a real feel-good book that I read time and time again when I was a teenager? It's called Fly-by-Night by a lady called K.M. Peyton (she who also wrote the magnificent Flambards). It's set in England (sorry no bloodies or bollocks in this one) about a teenaged girl who is desperate for a pony of her own but her family cannot afford one. After perusing expensive sale barns which leave her feeling depressed and hopeless, she manages to find one cheap but it is unbroken and she is inexperienced... you can take it from there. It's beautifully written and I've read it about 20 times.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>

                      I just went through this phase, and spent way too much money on alibris, abebooks, and amazon's used section!

                      Don't forget the sequel to Fly-by-Night - The Team! I liked it even better then Fly, even now at the old age of 27

                      Member of the drafties/drafties X clique, and the tall people clique!

                      My 'blog

                      Comment


                      • K.M. Peyton has written quite a lot of books, many following Ruth and Peter. Not all of them are horsey. But they are all worth getting, and many of them will be in your library. I think it's Free Rein that has Peter and Jonathan training a point-to-point horse and keeping it in the dining room of an abandoned house.

                        Best of all, she is still writing - Blind Beauty is the last one I know about, from 1999.

                        Edited to say that I just looked her up at amazon.co.uk, and I see a title I didn't know about, "The Swallow Tale", which is horsey and supposed to be a series. And there's a non-horsey 2003 book called "Small Gains." And a horsey title that looks to be coming this summer called "Alice." Looks like there are several others that have not made it across the pond.

                        Shoot. I did not need to know these things! Get back to work, poltroon!

                        [This message was edited by poltroon on Aug. 11, 2003 at 06:27 PM.]
                        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


                        • Has anyone read "Abby Malone" by Shelley Peterson? It has glowing reviews on amazon, and an eventer on the cover, but I'm afraid it may be too (sorry guys!) Saddle-Club-y for me.
                          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

                          • Original Poster

                            Holy crap . . . I just returned to this thread after giving it a few days to "collect" replies (you know how it is. You leave for a few days, and because the replies have all accumulated while you've been gone, it's like getting a whole bunch more at once, instead of getting them gradually . . . okay, maybe you don't know how it is ). This is officially the longest running thread I have ever started, and for some reason, that makes me ridiculously happy!

                            I shall now have to go through this thing with a pencil and pad of paper to list the books I must eventually blow all my money on. If I run into any questions I can help answer in the process, I shall do my best.

                            poltroon - I've actually got Abby Malone. I saw in the bookstore yesterday, while browsing, and I'll read it tonight. If no one's answered you by the time I'm done, I'll let you know if the Saddle Club factor is nauseatingly high or not. I also purchased a couple of books from a series called "Heartland" or something that has already failed me with respect to accuracy in the H/J world. I'll make fun of it openly if everyone can assure me that the author or friends of hers or whatever doesn't post here (although, having just posted that incredibly mean last statement, such care may no longer be necessary ). They're not awful. They're just not spot on in some places, and that's what you've got to be if you're going to be writing for a particular sport.

                            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


                            • I was shocked to discover there's a Yahoo list devoted to K.M. Peyton's "Flambards" series.

                              (I like "Flambards" but I really prefer her pony-club books. )

                              But anyway, I found this great essay/interview there:

                              http://groups.yahoo.com/group/flambards/message/3046

                              [from a] introductory essay by Karen M. Klockner which
                              discusses the author and her works in some detail as well as
                              presenting a bit of critical analysis of the the Maplin Bird for
                              students.


                              "Born in Birmingham in 1929, Kathleen Wendy Herald grew up in
                              Surbiton and attended Manchester Art School. She married fellow art
                              student, Michael Peyton, in 1950, and received her teaching diploma
                              the following year. Trained to teach art, she never considered
                              writing as a profession, although it was her first love. 'Writing,'
                              she says 'has always been my favorite way of enjoying myself'.
                              Her first book was published when she was 15, and at the time she
                              had already written six or seven full-length novels. After marrying,
                              she and her husband collaborated on stories and used the name K.M.
                              Peyton to indicate each of their initials. Since the publication of
                              Windfall (1962), pub in the US as Sea Fever), Ms. Peyton has authored
                              the books on her own, but still retains the pseudonym. Today she
                              lives 'in an old farm cottage in a village 40 miles from London, our
                              boat moored in a creek 10 minutes walk away, the ponies grazing in a
                              field next door. . . . We draw, write, charter our boat and take
                              photographs for a living - and feel that it is a very good
                              arrangement!'

                              When working together, the Peytons wrote magazine serials, largely
                              to formula, which were later published as books. After it was no
                              longer necessary to continue the enterprise for financial reasons, Ms
                              Peyton decided to write something for her own pleasure- a book in
                              which she could 'ramble on'. The result was Windfall, which she
                              considers her 'first pure book.' Her publisher at the time, Collins,
                              returned the manuscript saying she ought to shorten it and cut out
                              all the philosophical parts- 'which of course were what I thought
                              were all the good bits,' she says. So she sent it to Oxford, who
                              accepted it and who continue to publish her books today.

                              . . . She believes firmly that 'one's books can only be built on
                              one's own experiences' - a belief borne out by the fact that nearly
                              all of her stories are about the things she knows and loves: horses,
                              boats, planes, and the sea. . . .
                              While writing the Pennington books...she learned to play the piano.. . .
                              Flambards (1967), The Edge of the Cloud (68) and Flambards in
                              Summer (69) were published in the late 60's and have been acknowledged as some of K. M. Peyton's best work. The trilogy traces heroine Christina from her arrival as an orphan at her uncle's home, Flambards, through her war-torn marriage and eventual return to the house years later. Christina and Emily of The Maplin Bird (64) have been described as the author's two 'splendid heroines' who 'even in their teens are women, not girls. The last thing a Peyton heroine would ever be is girlish.' The author says of them 'I think ...[they] are more or less the same person, and both are rather untypical of the period I set them in.' Her characters are often orphans or adolescents who are estranged from their parents, and their situation thus forces them to handle difficult problems on their own. Ms Peyton confesses that 'Christina in Flambards is what I would like to be,
                              strong and fearless.'

                              Ms Peyton further explains the fact that she writes almost
                              exclusively about adolescents by saying, 'I don't feel I'm a writer who wants to write adult books and has just missed off; I never have that feeling. . . I'm very interested in this age. . . where young people change so quickly, and are so difficult to understand, in all ways. I can remember those feelings so clearly. It is a fascinating age, and everything matters so much.' She also says, 'the adult situation bores me. Characters in my mind die on me after the age of twenty.'

                              [referring to the book Midsummer Night's Death (1979): ] The focus is again on the psychological trauma of the central character.
                              This focus shows an apparent shift in the author's work over the years. Clearly, the 'philosophical bits' of which she was so fond in Windfall have gradually taken precedence over the action. It cannot be said that the books now lack excitement or adventure, for both of those elements are still present in abundance. But the balance has shifted- the adventurous has given way to the introspective.

                              K.M.Peyton's central characters often struggle over ethical decisions, but she 'denies a specific moral intention in her books.'
                              . . . critics have often said her plots sound trite and she acknowledges this truth: 'If you sum up the plot, it's been done so many times, they's so hackneyed, and they all sound so unworthy, if you just put them in a few words.' In contrast she is continually praised for her method, 'the exactness, the psychological accuracy, the grace and humor and cool, flowing ease of it all.' The Maplin Bird reveals the roots of her mature style - the vivid quality of descriptive passages, the gift for telling a good story, the ability to evoke an authentic setting and to develop interesting, well-rounded characters.

                              She has been criticized both by herself and by others for having a strong romantic streak. . . . Many of Peyton's characters feel a closeness with nature and are happiest when running along a beach, galloping on a horse or holding the tiller of a boat. The integration of action and introspection occurs in the earlier as well as in the later books. But the romanticism is not an untempered one: the glorious moments of joy occur only with the knowledge that they cannot last.
                              [...]
                              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


                              • poltroon - i've read Abby Malone and it's by no means a classic but pretty fun to read. From what i can remember the book starts off with a bull getting loose and Abby sees it from her classroom. She jumps out of the classroom and grabs this little mare (the one on the cover of the book) from a paddock across the rode, fashions a bit/reins out of twine or something and saves the day by rounding up the bull. It turns out that this mare, named Moonlight Sonata is virtually unrideable so her owner is really impressed by Abby and hires herto ride Moonlight Sonata. Abby's dad is in jail for money laundering that he apparently didnt do and her mom is an alcoholic. i think. Abby also has pet coyotes,raccoons, etc. Or was that what happened in Dancer? The two books are strikingly similar, though Dancer showjumps for the Queen and Moonlight Sonata events.

                                Anyways, Abby gets to exercise her detective skills and gets to meet all the people from Dancer
                                I liked it it was like a Saddle Club and a Nancy Drew novel all rolled into one. Only better


                                *...the burninator!*
                                *...the burninator!*

                                Comment

                                • Original Poster

                                  trogdor - I just read the first part of it, and you were right when you mentioned the other day that this Abby chick is weird. That twine out of which she fashions a makeshift bridle (is anyone else hearing the MacGyver theme song? Da-da-DA . . . da-da-DA . . . da-da-da-da-da-da-da-DA-DA . . . ) comes from her pants, because she was freaking wearing the damn thing as a belt! And then she's all confused when people make fun of her. Kids are already mean. You're not supposed to make it that easy for them. This is going to be an interesting book.

                                  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


                                  • What a great thread! Can anyone recall the name of this one- girl is orphaned, moves in with relatives, discovers a barn nearby, gets a job riding/teaching/etc., finds a neglected, injured horse in the barn that the mean trainer is ignoring. Nurses the horse back to health, and somehow saves the mean trainer and all the horses from a barn fire. Grateful barn owner hires the girl's uncle from Ireland to be the new trainer. Anyone? It might be as generic as 'A Horse of Her Own,' but I don't remember. It was a looong time ago!

                                    The other book I'd recommend to anyone of any age is 'No Job for a Lady' by Phyllis Lose. It's non-fiction, the autobiography of one of the first female vets to practice on horses. She also trained racehorses and showed to put herself through school. It's a fascinating read, and a real eye-opener on how far women have come in the last few decades.

                                    Comment


                                    • <BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><font size="-1">quote:</font><HR>Originally posted by MHM:
                                      What a great thread! Can anyone recall the name of this one- girl is orphaned, moves in with relatives, discovers a barn nearby, gets a job riding/teaching/etc., finds a neglected, injured horse in the barn that the mean trainer is ignoring. Nurses the horse back to health, and somehow saves the mean trainer and all the horses from a barn fire. Grateful barn owner hires the girl's uncle from Ireland to be the new trainer. Anyone? It might be as generic as 'A Horse of Her Own,' but I don't remember. It was a looong time ago!

                                      <HR></BLOCKQUOTE>

                                      Yup that is A Horse of Her Own by Selma Hudnut. I love that book. She has a sequal to it that is almost impossible to find...someday I will get lucky and get it, it is called Irish Hurdles.

                                      Selma Hudnut also has a another great horse book called The Redhead and The Roan.

                                      "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


                                      • I am older than many of the books discussed here.

                                        I do remember Hobby Horse Hill, thanks for the memory bump.

                                        I am surprised no one has mentioned the Jane Mc Illvaine series involving Cammy ( Cammy's Choice, Cammy's Challenge and Cammy's Cousin)

                                        Amazon.com bought and absorbed Bibliofind. Bibliofind is an index that links you to 1000's of used book stores around the world. You can find some great deals there. Find the title on one of the horse book web servers then go look in amazon for competitive prices.

                                        For non-fiction Jane Dillon's "School for Young Riders" is so much fun. I really wanted to be Kit Kavendish ( Kathy Kusner)

                                        I mean, who didn't?

                                        _\\]
                                        -- * &gt; hoopoe
                                        The ancient Greeks did not write obituaries. They only wanted to know if you had a passion.
                                        _\\]
                                        -- * > hoopoe
                                        Procrastinate NOW
                                        Introverted Since 1957

                                        Comment


                                        • <BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><font size="-1">quote:</font><HR>Originally posted by LoriO:
                                          Yup that is A Horse of Her Own by Selma Hudnut. I love that book. She has a sequal to it that is almost impossible to find...someday I will get lucky and get it, it is called Irish Hurdles.

                                          <HR></BLOCKQUOTE>

                                          I NEVER knew there was a sequel to that! That is still one of my favorites and I read it a couple times a year. It is getting a little worn, but as long as I can read it, I don't care I will have to find the other book.

                                          Comment

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