Friday, December 25, 2015

Flying Roundup (1957)




Flying Roundup
Genevieve Torrey Eames, il. Lorence F. Bjorklund
1957, Julian Messner, Inc.

The noise grew louder and around the base of the mountain came a small band of horses, manes and tails flying and a cloud of dust swirling about them, kicked up by their galloping hoofs.  Johnny’s heart raced at the sight.  The leaders started into the valley, halted and swerved away again.  Then, above the hoofbeats, came the roar of a motor and a small yellow plane swung into sight, following the horses and flying so low it seemed almost to skim the brush and willows along the stream.  As the horses hesitated it circled out to head them off and then roared up behind them, sending them in a mad stampede up the valley.

Johnny Shaw is dozing, postponing the end of a camping trip, when he sees a roundup of wild horses, dominated by an airplane.  The scene is brutal – the terrified herd runs down and crushes a foal, and the cowboys frankly tell Johnny that the wild horses being driven into a truck are destined for a cannery – but Johnny’s torn.  The pilot is the father of his two best friends, Dan and Linda Cameron.  Vern is newly home from Korea, and trying to use his Air Force skills to tide over his new ranch.  Johnny recognizes the family’s genuine need, but when he spots an overlooked band of wild horses, he heads into the hills to find a way to get them moving before anyone else spots them.

There are two kinds of children’s books – those where the villains are the villains, and those where the villains are really just people you don’t know well enough.  This is the latter.  Johnny comes to understand where Vern’s coming from, and how the money from his flying roundups is intended for good, and somehow the early scene with the agonized foal is overwritten.  It’s not very satisfying. 

About the Author
1894-1991


Other books by Eames (horse)
Pat Rides The Trail (1946) il. Dan Noonan
A Horse To Remember (1947) il. Paul Brown
The Good Luck Colt (1953) il. Paul Brown
Ghost Town Cowboy (1957) il. Paul Brown

Other books by Eames (dog)
Handy of the Triple S (1949) il. Paul Brown

Short Stories
Jarvis Discovers Gold" appears in the anthology Horses, Horses, Horses: Palominos And Pintos, Polo Ponies And Plow Horses, Morgans And Mustangs edited by Phyllis Fenner
Someday I’ll Race Him in Young Wings – the Magazine of the Boys’ and Girls’ Club

Monday, September 7, 2015

Last Hurdle (1953_



Last Hurdle
F.K. Brown, il. Peter Spier
1953, Thomas Crowell (not shown)

With a sigh, she tipped her head back and stared up at the soaring board sides of the barn. Sunlight slid down through the open half of the stable door to bathe the big box stalls with light. In her imagination, she saw heads moving among the shadows behind the barred upper halves of the stalls, and she could almost hear the soft fluttering of nostrils, the stamp of hoofs.

Katherine Nelson’s family has moved to a falling-down farm, and although she has never been on or near a horse, she is determined to acquire one. She’s already stalking the local horse owners, showing up when a nearby farmer is taking his team in for the day and beguiling a ride:

Half of her mind kept singing “This is the first time I’ve ever been on a horse! I’m riding a horse – a horse!” while the other half kept trying to remember all the things she had read in her horse books: how to grip with the knees, how to hold the reins in both hands, how to keep the ankles straight, heels down. But she was far too excited to think very clearly, so she just sat there, smiling happily to herself and riding.

Kathy and obliging little brother Ned join finances to liberate an abused, neglected horse from a careless owner, with the encouragement of hired man Willie.  Their parents, initially amused at their game, realize suddenly that the kids aren’t just being imaginative, they actually did manage to buy a horse.

“You what?” her mother shrieked, rising from her chair and almost tipping it over in her haste. “You did what? What on earth are you talking about?”

Kathy names the black horse with a white face Baldy, and nurses him back to health.  And naturally, her thoughts turn to further achievement.  Now that Baldy’s healthy again, she begins to jump him and plots to enter him in a local show.  The show, held at a country club over the Memorial Day weekend, is very obviously over Kathy’s head – just figuring out what classes to enter him in is difficult, and at every step, Kathy has doubts.

She imagined herself falling off at the first jump; she heard the spatter of laughter from the stands and the echo of a derisive bugle. Only too clearly, she saw Baldy plowing through the rails, sending splintered wood flying in all directions.

And even before the show starts, Kathy runs into more problems.  There is, of course, a happy ending with a victorious Kathy already starting to dream of more horses.
 
Brisk pace, nice style and funny little drawings.  Well worth a read.

 
Other editions
1953 Crowell
1970 Apollo paperback
1988 Linnet Books

About the Author
Frieda Kenyon Brown (1920-2011)
Brown was born in Philadelphia to a father named, wonderfully, Benjamin Franklin II (whose son was named Benjamin Franklin III); her unusual middle name was her mother’s maiden name.  Raised on an apple farm, she loved farm life.  She attended Bryn Mawr College and joined the American Red Cross during World War II. She was awarded the Medal of Freedom for her work in field hospitals in France and Germany with the 3rd Army, and married Lt. William Douglas Brown in 1945.  His military career kept them on the move, but after he retired, they followed her father to North Carolina, where Brown finally got a farm of her own in Pisgah Forest. She had 2 children.  

As a writer, she mostly collaborated on nonfiction with Claude Frazier Albee, as well as writing under the pseudonym F.K. Franklin. This appears to be her sole horsey book.

Oddities
The 2012 film version of the popular 2008 young adult novel The Hunger Games was filmed in the Pisgah National Forest. 
 
Links




Tuesday, August 25, 2015

RIP Patricia Leitch


Having wandered over to the Books, Mud and Compost blog, I discovered the prolific pony book author Patricia Leitch died on July 28. 


I read For Love of a Horse for the first time while hiding behind an armchair during a violent thunderstorm with my Beardie wrapped around my legs. It is one of those vivid, perfect memories from childhood that feels as if I could wake up there again, if I tried hard enough. The storm-charged air, the cave-like security behind the chair, the shaggy dog's comforting weight, and the transporting book.  I still have that book.

I've read only a few of Leitch's many books, but they made a deep impression.  Her characters, human and equine, were outstanding.  Jinny - humorless, driven, passionate Jinny, tearing her heart out over the abused mare she names Shantih at the grim suggestion of her beloved, slightly frightening Ken. The placidly stubborn Highlands. The wild mare. The storm-ravaged pottery, the haunting wall mural, the dream-like state in which she paints that contest entry and then wanders downstairs for a bit of a snack.  The dog Kelly. The wet ride across confusing moors to track down the library van.

Leitch had her flaws - if she didn't particularly appreciate a personality, she didn't much bother with the character.  Jinny's sister and mother were virtually flat - but her writing had great scope and style.  It's rare enough to get that sort of enormous energy poured into a child's book, let alone a child's book centered on horses.  Leitch was a classic.
 
Obits

NZ Ponywriter
Daily Record

Links
Jane Badger Books
Ponymadbooklovers
Wikipedia
Jinny at Finmory Facebook
Catnip Books

Monday, July 20, 2015

Falling For Eli (2012)

And another nonfiction, adult choice. 



Falling For Eli: How I Lost Heart, Then Gained Hope Through The Love Of A Singular Horse
Nancy Shulins
2012, Da Capo Press

This isn’t the party I pictured all the years I secretly dreamed of this day, little fantasies that helped me endure every painful procedure that got me to where I am now. Someday, I’d tell myself, while being biopsied, inseminated, or injected with dye, this part will be over, and my friends and I will celebrate over mini-cupcakes in a room filled with spray roses and alphabet blocks… Like the pictures that change when you tilt the card they’ve been printed on, I have only to shift my viewing angle ever so slightly for the diaper paul to morph into a feed bucket, the changing pad into a saddle pad. And with that, my baby shower reverts to a “bridle” shower.

After years spent trying to overcome infertility, Nancy Shulins and her husband are done with the quest for a baby.  As the journalist tries to understand what comes next, a friend with a horse brings back memories of childhood riding lessons.  Before she knows it, she’s in thrall to a dressage trainer. And the new interest is a lifesaver when her sister, whose children Shulins adores, moves far away.
The friend’s horse dies, cruelly, of laminitis.  Shulins, grieving, is introduced to a Thoroughbred for sale, and finds herself a horse owner.

That owning a horse in suburban Connecticut on the eve of the new millennium is a privilege seems obvious enough on a crisp autumn morning or a balmy spring afternoon; less so on a frigid February morning when drinking water freezes in buckets and sheets of ice cover the ground.
I can’t wait.

Her new horse, Eli, enchants her.  Less enchanting are her relationships with a series of instructors, most of them abusive and nasty.  Shulins seems extremely tolerant of hard-ass instruction; at one point she seeks out a self-styled ‘marine’ fitness instructor to get her in better shape for riding.  Between this screaming marine and her two dressage instructors, she takes a lot of abuse in pursuit of riding well.  She’s a successful journalist, and it’s awkward to criticize her choices, but it’s painful to read the passages about her trainers. 

But of course, the book is about the horse.  And she adores Eli, whose feet betray him, and whose God-given talent as a horse to find new and exciting ways to hurt himself is always willing to take up the slack when the hooves have been temporarily fixed.  Over the years, she nurses him back to health repeatedly, at different barns and with different instructors, riding and tending barn in the depths of winter.  And when EPM strikes him, she is crushed

I forgot to rehearse losing my horse. I’d taken for granted that he’d be here for me, mitigating my childlessness and equalizing my grief; leading me out of my dark, quiet house and into the bright light of day. 

And aggressively effective, ruthlessly direct. She tracks down the world’s authorities on EPM and finds an experimental drug that does, in fact, cure Eli.

A wonderful, funny book.    She nails a host of horsey topics, including:

barn life:
“Think of this place [barn] as a big junior high… Jessie’s the bitchy head cheerleader.”
and
“token male boarders”

the horrors of animal husbandry:
I try hiding his pills in sweet feed… I hollow out a Granny Smith apple and stuff it with pills…I try hiding pills in doughnuts. Oatmeal cookies. Apple Jacks. Straight molasses. Maple syrup. Peppermints. Mashed bananas. Finally, in desperation I buy a coffee grinder and pulverize the pills into a powder. I then stir it into applesauce and plunge the whole mucky mess down his thrown.  Homemade applesauce at first, then store-bought when he makes it clear that as far as his taste buds are concerned, my grandmother’s recipe has nothing on Mott’s.

the inevitability of injury
The first buck comes out of nowhere, pitching me forward onto his neck; the second – a real beauty, all four feet off the ground – launches me into the air. I’m just thinking how odd it feels to be suddenly soaring through nothingness like an ejected fighter pilot when I hit the dirt hard on my left side.

Horses in general
Damn near everything, to a Thoroughbred, is unexpected.

The winter barn
… extreme cold is what separates the horse owner from the horse lover.


Etc.
Shulins even managed to keep me reading despite a NJ joke.  She grew up in a small town in New Hampshire, yearning to leave, then went away to college:  

At Northwestern University in Boston everyone seemed to have come from New Jersey, a foreign land I’d grown up making fun of. From the Brahmins of Bergen County to the Panchamas of Patterson, theirs was a caste system far more refined than any I’d known in Cow Hampshire.

And I adored her echo of O. Henry, whose short stories frequently focused on New York and her satellites in loving/mocking terms:

…. Hoboken, that perennial punch line on the Hudson…


Websites

Saturday, May 9, 2015

Saving Baby: How One Woman’s Love For A Racehorse Led To Her Redemption (2013)



This is a  rather long review of a book which is not old, or fiction or children's.  It's a nonfiction book from 2013 about the origins of a racehorse rescue, CANTER, and the tragedy that led to its founding.  The author's frankness about the guilt, lingering and permanent, over the choices she made with her horses and her family, makes for powerful reading. 


 Saving Baby: How One Woman’s Love For A Racehorse Led To Her Redemption
Jo Anne Normile and Lawrence Lindner
2013, St. Martin’s Press

In 1973, a young Jo Anne Normile fell in love with a racehorse.  Secretariat did that to people.  His stretch run in the Belmont Stakes still makes your breath catch. Roughly 20 years later, the adult Normile leases a pregnant Thoroughbred broodmare, exchanging the mare’s care during foaling for the right to the next breeding, which she plans to be to a Secretariat son.  She doesn’t expect to fall in love with the foal, who is technically supposed to be delivered back to the mare’s owner once weaned. Then the foal is born.

At the sound of the whicker, the baby lifted its head, its ears flopped to the side. It then let out a whiny, although it was more like the honk of a Canadian goose, and that, combined with our relief, I think, made all of us laugh hard.

Normile delights in the foal, Baby, doing all the ground work that will make him calm, confident, easy to handle. 

… I was determined that Baby was going to grow to adulthood strong not just in body but also in mind so that nothing would ever hurt him.

Inevitably, she and her husband decide to buy the colt.  The owner agrees, but on condition they race him.  Nervous but willing, they embark on a career as racehorse owners. First Baby and then Scarlett (their Secretariat filly, born of the second breeding), head off to trainers.

Normile finds the racing world fascinating, and quickly becomes very involved.  She makes mistakes with trainers, picks up the lingo, and learns more than she’d like about abusive horsemen.  Bad things happen, but never quite bad enough to discourage her completely.  In some of the best passages, she and co-author Lindner show how the creeping sense of something wrong begins to live in the back of her mind. She rationalizes the injuries and questionable training practices, knowing that all competitive athletics requires risk of pain and harm.  She worries about her horses, changing barns and trainers repeatedly until they get a trainer she trusts and a barn setup more natural than the average. She learns of ‘breakdowns’ and why a big truck regularly rumbles by on its way to the empty fields behind the track – it’s the company that picks up dead horses to take to the renderer.

The gruesome knowledge bothers her, but she feels safe in that Baby and Scarlett are so lovingly tended and sound; the breakdowns are, she thinks, mostly due to badly conditioned or lame horses being run with injuries.  And their first, hard-won, win is intoxicating:

If I was hooked before, even with the sinister goings-on that I had seen at the track, I was addicted now… all the glamour of racing, of the Sport of Kings – it was something I was now truly part of.

And then it all changes.  Baby breaks down in a race, a single step that torques his leg, shatters his tibia, destroys any hope of saving him. Normile ends up in those empty fields with her horse, crying and telling him she’s sorry, so sorry, that she failed him, and then has to step back for the vet to euthanize him.

Normile sets out to get the track, whose surface was being decried as dangerous before that fatal race, redone.  In the process, she discovers the even more gruesome fate of racehorses who either break down without dying outright, or simply aren’t working out at racing.  They’re sold for meat.  Worse than that, the processing of horses for meat is brutal – they’re crammed into trucks without food, water or  - when they’re injured – painkillers. The trucks are often designed for much shorter cattle, so the horses are cramped and bent over for the long ride to the slaughterhouse. The slaughter method is inexact, a bolt to the brain that often misses the agitated horse, and has to be repeated.  Horrified at this new face of racing, so far removed from the glory of Secretariat’s career or the joy of watching Baby run, Normile launches a rescue for racehorses.

It’s useful at this point to remind yourself this was the 1990s.  The nascent internet was the exclusive property of a few tech geeks and the military. The racing industry’s solution to slow or lame racehorses was still its dirty little secret, and secrets were much easier to keep. And animal rescue had not yet exploded. Normile's efforts are all the more impressive.

Normile’s rescue is eventually name Communication Alliance to Network Ex-Racehorses – CANTER.  It begins in Normile’s home state of Michigan, but spins off regional organizations all over the U.S.  Normile eventually steps away from CANTER to focus on her family, as her husband has severe health issues. She is now involved with another charity, Saving Baby Equine Chariy, whose mission is:

dedicated to protecting horses, ponies, mules, and donkeys from slaughter, abuse and neglect; promoting change through public awareness and education; rescuing these animals in emergency situations; and providing financial assistance to approved 501 (c) (3) organizations that rescue them from slaughter, abuse or neglect in order to help as many as possible.

Brief review
A very polished, professional, well-executed book which hits very hard in the repeated passages about Normile's feelings of having failed her horses and how her attempts to make things right never quite do.   

Interesting note: 
The book was originally self-published, got good reviews, and was picked up by St. Martin's and re-issued in hardcover.  (Original paperback cover below)

 Personal note: 

Around 2008, I happily followed two CANTER Mid-Atlantic bloggers who were retraining racehorses for new homes.  They were lovely blogs.
 

Links