Sunday, February 22, 2015

New books, old books and reissues


Simon & Schuster's Aladdin is reissuing five of Marguerite Henry's books in April as richly beautiful hardcover editions, using the original Wesley Dennis paintings for the covers.




A May 2014 article in Publisher's Weekly indicates  King of the Wind, Brighty and The White Stallions were all originally scheduled for November 2014. 


Also included in S&S's spring release schedule is the latest in a new series based on Henry's Chincoteague books, Moonlight Mile.Author Catherine Hapka is a prolific writer of horsey kit lit, from the Pony Scouts series for beginner readers to the A-Circuit series for teens.

#1
#2
#3
 
#4, released April 2015
#5, released July 2015

#6, released November 2015





Sunday, January 18, 2015

Snowman


It's funny about Snowman.  He's the horse who in 1956 went from having one hoof in a pet food can to being an elite show jumper, and very likely the only show jumper to ever make any impression on an American audience. His rags-to-riches story seems to have enabled him to make a slight dent in the extremely sturdy American indifference to horse shows.  Harness races were popular when everyone drove horses instead of cars. Thoroughbred racing was popular when we still associated wealth with beauty and glamor. Rodeos will always be popular because we are, at heart, all shit-kickers. But horse shows? Tweens riding Daddy's paycheck around a ring while Mommies Who Lunch applaud? You must be joking. 

Horse shows, in the hunter/jumper fashion, are elitist. It's an uncomfortable fit with the American sense of propriety, where every Trump pretends to be a self-made man. Of course, racing is even more elitist, but who can even bother being envious of people who own Bluegrass real estate? It's like envying the stars. Our real annoyance is with people whose homes block our view of the stars. And so we ignore show jumping. Completely.

Except for Snowman.  He had the charm of the underdog, plus the appeal of being an Ordinary Joe.  The photos of him being used as a giant pet by owner Harry de Leyer's children are more numerous than images of him competing at major horse shows.  







A sign of that interest is the fact that Snowman has had several books written about him.

  

The Story of Snowman, the Cinderella Horse by Tony Palazzo (1962)
















Snowman by Rutherford Montgomery (1967)



The Eight-Dollar Champion by Elizabeth Letts (2010)

And now, there's a documentary film being released:



Links
Harry & Snowman trailer
Elizabeth Letts website

Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Help a reader?

I love this site!
Maybe you can help me.
I am looking for book that has the cutest Los fashioned illustrations of ponies. Children come to choose the pony they want to ride around the track. They showcase the color and markings of the ponies. I do remember one was named Star, for the star marking. They was a dapple grey and I think some carts they pulled. I read it many times as a child in the 70's.
Any clue if the name?
Thank you! 



Anyone have any ideas?  I was thinking of Pony Girl by Janet Randall, because of the pony ride part and because one pony was named Star. 

Thursday, October 10, 2013

Catch Rider (2013)



Catch Rider
Jennifer H. Lyne
2013, Clarion Books (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt)

Submarine stood in my way, chewing on a flake of fescue.  He was an old skewbald pinto, huge feet and knees, a little swaybacked, large head and a big belly.  He had strong hooves and a powerful build.  Jimmy bought him for himself on a lark when they were doing work for a fellow in Pig Run.  Uncle Wayne said Sub was the soundest horse he’d ever seen.  Although most horss threw a shoe at about six weeks, Sub kept his shoes on so long, the blacksmith had to pry them off at twelve weeks.  Now he just stood there chomping on the hay.  He was past his prime and was a sad sight, with his long whiskers and manure stains on his white spots.  He wasn’t doing nothing but taking up space.  He was always in the way, and it made me angry.

14-year-old Sidney “Sid” Criser is angry a lot, for various reasons.  Her beloved father, Jimmy, died four years ago and her mother, Melinda, has managed to fall into a passive relationship with a violent man.  Sid’s love for horses and ambitions for riding gets some outlet working with her uncle Wayne, a drunk horse dealer, but going to work with him at Oak Hill, a fancy show barn, shows her just how far she is from the horsey pinnacle. 

And that’s where I’ll stop, because part of the charm of this book lies in how it keeps twisting. 
 The heroine’s path does take her down the unusual horsey book fortunate accidents, complete with rides on spectacular horses and getting vastly unlikely opportunities to do wonderful things.  It is, in fact, the most recent update of the classic modern horse-loving girl story – hardworking female child overcomes a disadvantaged background to achieve horsey success.  These are all set in what has to be one of the most esoteric, elite variations of equine competition, aka, hunter/jumper/Big Equitation – horse show genres that exist largely in America and tend to revolve around 14-year-old girls with well-heeled parents.  Barbara Morgenroth did it with Last Junior Year and Ride A Proud Horse, Jean Slaughter Doty with The Monday Horses and The Crumb.

Good
An interesting plot, a realistic if often aggravating hero, and crisp action.    

Bad
Sid, while realistic in behavior for a teen, is way too poised verbally and her aggressiveness is unrealistic – one moment she’s fearlessly picking fights with threatening older boys, and the next she’s cowering because someone threatened her.  

Personal reaction
I dislike redneck stories with sullen, two-fisted heroines that ain’t afeered of no damn boy.  I’ve met hard knock girls with black eyes and ready snarls, whose fists are just a’coverin’ a hurtin’ heart, and most of the time it’s like walking into a buzz saw.  Also, there’s probably a little mild jealousy that as a New Jersey resident, I can never claim to be country strong because people would just laugh.  Probably people in North Dakota feel the same way about urban stories (or, in fact, suburban stories, given that state’s cow/human ratio) about ambitious young shoe-buying chicks who have zany adventures in coffee shops.  Returning to the point – given my high resistance to rural tough chick heroines, the fact I finished the book and have a mildly positive opinion is an indication that it’s a decent book. 


Details
Something worth mentioning is that a catch rider is someone who “catches” rides at a horse show – ie, is a good enough rider, with a good enough reputation, that people will want them to ride their horse in a class.  In short, a rider without a horse, for the most part.  This doesn’t exactly describe our heroine, who has access to her uncle’s horses and horses owned by a variety of his friends (also, it should be added, low-rent dealers so their horses aren’t $50k warmbloods), but in essence, she’s a rider without a horse, and while the book is intensely horsey and the heroine is a typical fixated-on-horses type, there are a variety of horses who take center stage, then suddenly depart.  Appropriate, given the title and Sid’s ambition, but still rather jarring.

The action appears to take place during the 1980s.  It’s never explicitly stated, but two things – Sidney meets Idle Dice, a famous show jumper who retired in the 1980s, and the Maclay Finals occur in New York City, which hasn’t happened since 1989 – make me think it’s a period piece.  Also, things like cell phones, texting, etc., aren’t mentioned.   Things that are mentioned – Sid lives in rural south-west Virginia, near the city of Covington, and has an unfortunate habit of being overly hillbilly girl in speech.  OK, a bit bitchy, but I truly hate dialect.

Background
The Maclay Finals, highlight of the National Horse Show, were named for Alfred B. Maclay, second president of the Association of American Horse Shows (which would become the United States Equestrian Federation or USEF).  His term was 1925-1936.  If you needed any further proof of the money that horse shows can contain, his predecessor was a Vanderbilt.  The Maclay family’s wealth was built on ice, which sounds funny unless you’ve just gone through a massive heat wave and then it sounds completely sensible.  After a brief flirtation with the family business, Alfred shrugged it off and settled down to what was undoubtedly a deeply satisfying life managing his personal wealth and being influential in various hobbies including harness horses, horse shows and dog shows (he was an AKC judge), glass art and gardens.  He had a Millbrook, NY house called Killean Farm, and a Florida home that his widow turned into a public garden.

And now tearing my attention away from the American rich - sorry, so much of horses seems to end up with the 1% - Maclay classes are horse show hunter classes for junior (youth) riders; to reach the finals, you need to accumulate points.  The finals, along with the National Horse Show, were originally held at Madison Square Garden in New York City.   The National moved the the Meadowlands in NJ in 1989, to Wellington, Florida in 1992, and to Syracuase (as part of another horse show) in 2008, and finally to the Kentucky Horse Park in 2011.

Links
http://www.covington.va.us/

Reviews

Friday, September 20, 2013

Heather Takes The Reins (1996)

Heather Takes The Reins
Sheri Cooper Sinykin
Illustrators: Richard Lauter (cover); Ed Tadiello (illustrations); Rich Grote (spot illustrations)
1996, Scholastic, Inc.
Series: Magic Attic Club

A series about four best friends - Heather, Alison, Keisha, and Megan - who find a golden key that unlocks a neighbor's attic and allows them access to a magic trunk.  The clothes they find in the trunk transport them - separately and together - to other places, and adventures.

Heather's confidence is shot after a disastrous first try at Academic Bowl.  Dispirited, she heads to the attic for an adventure to boost her mood.  She chooses a riding outfit and finds herself in a stable, with a sad bay horse named Adagio who isn't good at jumping.  Happily, he is good at dressage.

The central conceit of the attic adventures is that the girls get to experience their magical visits to other lives with all the necessary specialized knowledge.  So Heather knows how to ride and in one day goes from her first ride to winning a kur - a musical freestyle in dressage.  With only a background watching National Velvet to draw on.  Which is why magical adventures rock.


This is a short book, heavily illustrated and with writing that at best shows promise - but generally isn't trying too hard.  Maybe understandably, as this is part of a gimmicky series, but it's disappointing to have a line like:

At last, as if he were doing her a great favor, he accepted the treat and turned his head away. His teeth crunched noisily as he watched Heather from the corner of his eye.

It starts well, with a wry note that feels true, but falls apart as the crunching goes astray - the treat, surely, is doing the crunching, not the teeth - and the oddness of a horse (with virtually 360 vision) looking out the corner of its eye.


Notes
The books seem to have been accompanied by a set of dolls - the large sort, like the American Girl dolls - and I'm not sure which came first.  It's likely the books were marketing tie-ins with the dolls.


Links
Sinykin's Magic Attic Club books
Fantastic Fiction list of the series