The Tripold Trilogy was one of the key series of my childhood. Along with Lloyd Alexander's Prydain books and uh...Alfred Hitchcock and the Three Investigators.
'Shells'
Literary Buffistas 3: Don't Parse the Blurb, Dear.
There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."
You and your friend can't get John Christopher's plots out of your heads
That's the weird thing to me - we'd both done the same thing, with the same author!
A few years ago, I picked up The Black Stallion for a reread after many decades since the last time I read it. It didn't hold up nearly as well as I'd hoped. The movie has replaced the book as my preferred way of experiencing that story, unlike A Little Princess, which I still love rereading.
I read all the Black Stallion books too. In fact, I recently picked up a Breyer horse with racing carriage and flashed it at JZ yelling, "It's the Black Stallion's sulky colt! The Hambeltonian!"
I also read all the Kjellgaard dog books. And the Terhune collie books too.
I reread most of the Black Stallion books recently. I was actually pretty pleased to find that they weren't horribly racist.
It's also kind of entertaining to watch the progression of the plots go from mildly implausible to amnesia to aliens to vampire bats.
It's also kind of entertaining to watch the progression of the plots go from mildly implausible to amnesia to aliens to vampire bats.
Right?
The Island Stallion Races (1955) - Two aliens from another world enter the secret valley of Azul Island and offer Steve an opportunity for Flame to compete against the world's fastest race horses.
People don't believe me when I tell them about the plots.
I still love rereading A Little Princess and Little Women. Total comfort reads.
I only read the first Black Stallion.
My favorite horse books were written by Marguerite Henry--Misty of Chincoteague and its sequel, of course, but I equally loved Justin Morgan Had a Horse, King of the Wind, and Born to Trot.
I know! It's nutty but fun.
Farley, Henry, and Terhune--lots of happy memories there. Okay, time to hit the secondhand bookshop. Maybe I can find a copy of King of the Wind.