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Name five best horse stories for kids...

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  • #81
    Stillwaiting --

    The Billy & Blaze books were written by C.W. Anderson I believe. I bought the whole set several years ago in case I ever had a child --which doesn't appear likely. I'm glad I have them anyway. My fondest memories are sitting on the arm of my grandfather's chair as he read these books to me over and over...
    If you believe everything you read, better not read. -- Japanese Proverb

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    • #82
      <BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><font size="-1">quote:</font><HR>Originally posted by Merlin:
      OMG, I remember how traumatized I was by Beat the Turtle Drum!!! <HR></BLOCKQUOTE>

      I know I own this book and read it once and was really... disappointed and traumatized.

      I felt similarly about the Red Pony. I was told to read it because it was classic and horsey. I was so bitter about the whole thing that it was a decade before I was willing to give Steinbeck another shot.
      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

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      • #83
        I remember when I was little loving Nancy Wright Grossman's A Leg Up for Lucinda (maybe it was part of a series?) and Carol Fenner's A Summer of Horses.
        I don\'t want to achieve immortality through my work; I want to achieve immortality through not dying.
        Woody Allen

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        • #84
          What on earth happened in 'Beat the turtle drum'?!! I may have missed it but?!

          Another vote for silver brumby books, and I think that the 'Jackie' books, where she wins her pony 'Misty' are better than the Jill books for young readers- easier to get into.

          K.M Peyton is brilliant and 'Fly-by-night' is a wonderful book.

          Have we said 'King of the Wind'? That is one Marguerite Henry book I could not part with- its still on my bookshelves now and I am 24!
          In the swiftness of my darkness I whisper to thunder, I am patient as stone, as wild as lightening, the very symbol of surging potency and the power of movement for I am THE SPIRIT OF THE HORSE

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          • #85
            Yes, King of the Wind was awesome!! I loved that book. I also liked the Thoroughbred series, but they're not really classics or anything.
            I don\'t want to achieve immortality through my work; I want to achieve immortality through not dying.
            Woody Allen

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            • #86
              [QUOTE]Originally posted by poltroon:
              There's also the Bonnie series by Barbara Van Tuyl, about a young woman who rescues a mare that turns out to be a stolen high-class racehorse.

              A Horse for XYZ - a girl discovers that one of the camp horses is actually a valuable stolen racehorse, and she escapes with him to the backcountry until help can arrive.

              QUOTE]

              Is "A Horse for XYZ" the one in which the horse has been dyed and the girl runs away to escape the theifs looking for it?

              I think this is the book I did a report on in 2 or third grade where the teacher told me to not read anymore horse books, that I needed to diversify. PHfttt. Whatever...at least I read. You couldn't keep my nose out of a book.
              Keith: "Now...let's do something normal fathers and daughters do."
              Veronica: "Buy me a pony?"

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              • #87
                I think so. I remember torrential rain and the girl redoing her pack at various times. I think the horse's name was Snake Dancer, and he was a racing QH.

                "XYZ" is the initials of an alter-ego secret agent type... if our protagonist were the mythical XYZ (our protagonist muses), she would know just what to do and get everything right.

                Funny how teachers, et al, always tried to force us to be more "well rounded." Ironically, that approach backfires, I think. Feed the child's obsession, and/or guide it onto new paths, instead of trying to shut it down.
                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

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                • #88
                  Pat Smythe's Three Jays series is another set of British horse classics.

                  Thread killer Extraordinaire
                  "I'm a lumberjack, and I'm okay."
                  Thread killer Extraordinaire

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                  • #89
                    From a bookseller describing Beat the Turtle Drum:

                    In May, Joss was saving up to rent a horse for a week, planning on using her birthday money, and a lot of persuasion. Her older sister, Kate, observed it all; building a barn in the backyard and the storm blowing it down, and Joss polishing her riding boots every day and worrying about colic.

                    Kate remembered climbing the tree in the backyard with Joss and looking down at Prince, quietly munching on the grass below them. And then in a few irrevocable seconds, Kate's world changed forever.

                    Awards:

                    Outstanding Book of the Year: New York Times

                    "Lighten up, Francis." -Stripes

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                    • #90
                      SUBK, great idea. I did something similar for my twin daughters (they're 11). I was able to find Hobby Horse Hill (already mentioned, by LAvinia Davis) on Amazon. Also by her is Sandy's Spurs.

                      One of my favorites, which my kids seemed to like was, "A horse named Summer." It's about a girl who rents a horse for the summer. It was actually written by a teen-ager , and is very instructional.

                      I'll have to print this list for my kids.

                      Lany

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                      • #91
                        There are so many, but one of my favorites is by Zilpha Keatley Snyder called "Season of Ponies."
                        It is so good and the illustrations are incredible. I have been searching everywhere for a first edition, but to no avail.

                        Please read it and tell me what you think!

                        ximmer
                        x

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                        • #92
                          ximmer - what is Season of Ponies about? It sounds SO familiar, but I can't quite place it!

                          I know I swore to stay off this thread, but my little sister in law started riding last fall and her b-day is coming up. I'd like to get her some good horsey fiction, so I had to come back to research I swear I will buy no more books for me!

                          Member of the drafties/drafties X clique!

                          My 'blog

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                          • #93
                            You guys have covered so many of my favorites.

                            So far I can think of these that have been left out

                            Authors:
                            Rutherford Montgomery
                            Glenn Balch

                            Books:
                            Copper's Chance
                            Pat's Harmony
                            Pennys Worth
                            The Lonesome Sorrel
                            Red Roan Pony
                            Scarlet Royal

                            So many of our old favorites (Dorothy Lyons comes to mind especially) are hard to find because they combine wonderful stories with pictures by the masters of horse illustration - Wesley Dennis, Paul Brown, CW Anderson, etc.

                            Friendship is Love without his wings
                            -Lord Byron
                            "If you would have only one day to live, you should spend at least half of it in the saddle."

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                            • #94
                              poltroon, the first Bonnie book was
                              The Sweet Running Filly

                              Other good ones

                              Jump To the Stars by Gillian Baxter

                              The Phantom Roan by Stephen Holt

                              ****
                              Sign seen in the window of a humvee in Iraq: "One week-end a month, my ass!"
                              *****
                              You will not rise to the occasion, you will default to your level of training.

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                              • #95
                                RolyPolyPony,

                                "Season of Ponies" is about a lonely little girl who is left with her two aunts for a few months by her father (mother died when she was very small). During the time she is there she meets a mysterious boy who has tamed a herd of wild ponies. He teaches her to ride and work with the ponies. She is also exposed to the mystical forces at work in the woods and marsh around her aunts' house. The boy and the ponies themselves are rather otherwordly. She learns a lot about herself and comes out of her shell because of her time there.

                                It has been a long time since I have read it, but there is the gist of it. It is out of print, but you can buy it used on Amazon for a few dollars.

                                Let me know if you read it.

                                ximmer

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                                • #96
                                  Wow, what a great thread!!!
                                  Perhaps you folks could help me on the family's Impossible Quest: to find an old book we can't remember the title or the author of...
                                  It is peripherally a horse story: about a boy who lived with his grandmother who promised him a horse if he saved $100 for a saddle. It was set in Old Sacramento, CA, with great descriptions of the Tule fog ("so thick you could hammer a nail in it and hang up your coat") and the underground streets in Sac. The boy ends up catching some theives or swindlers who had been "working" in a theatre (this part I'm a bit hazy about...) and gets a $100 dollar reward, which, of course, he uses to buy a saddle. The End...
                                  I last read this book when I was about seven. It disappeared from our family library and no one can find it! Has anyone read this book????
                                  It was a great kid's book and a neat story!
                                  Don't tell me about what you can't do. That's boring. Show me what you can do. - Mom

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                                  • #97
                                    ximmer - you rock! I've bene wondering about the title of that book for years now - it's another one of those that I remember reading, loved, and then could only remember the plot and not the title! THANK YOU!

                                    Member of the drafties/drafties X clique!

                                    My 'blog

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                                    • #98
                                      Emryss,

                                      Could your book have been Smuggler's Road by Hal G. Evarts? It was published in 1968, and is catalogued as a children's adventure.

                                      I found one ex-library copy of it on abebooks.

                                      Thread killer Extraordinaire
                                      "I'm a lumberjack, and I'm okay."
                                      Thread killer Extraordinaire

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                                      • #99
                                        Maybe, maybe, maybe!!! Right time frame!!! Gotta check now!!!
                                        Don't tell me about what you can't do. That's boring. Show me what you can do. - Mom

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                                        • And then there's this one.

                                          Olsen, Gene
                                          Sacramento Gold
                                          Philadelphia: Macrae Smith Co, 1961. Hard Cover. Good +, Ex-Library/Good +. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall. Ex-library, pocket in fep, usual stamps, binding tight. DJ G+, colorful riverboat scene with a young boy and Chinese boy running away on shore. Yellow boards G+, tape residue on boards. Interior pages clean. An adventure story in the colorful Gold Rush days of California when riverboats ran the Sacramento river and a young boy sets out to find his sister in San Francisco only to find himself playing bodyguard to a young Chinese refugee being chased by the tong. He ends up overhearing a gang planning a million dollar robbery on the riverboat the Antelope and tries to foil their plans only to end up on a dangerous adventure. 180 pps. CJ204530. Bookseller Inventory #204530

                                          Thread killer Extraordinaire
                                          "I'm a lumberjack, and I'm okay."
                                          Thread killer Extraordinaire

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