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BfK No. 155 - November 2005

Cover Story
This issue’s cover illustration features Anthony Horowitz’s Raven’s Gate. Anthony Horowitz is interviewed by Nicholas Tucker. Thanks to Walker Books for their help with this November cover.

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Fire Pony

Rodman Philbrick
(Usborne Publishing Ltd)
192pp, 978-0746065082, RRP £5.99, Paperback
10-14 Middle/Secondary
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At a time when so many young people’s books seem unnecessarily long, it is good to encounter one where, in spite of the author’s well-trimmed narrative and pared-down style, there is no loss of depth or resonance. Such a book is Philbrick’s Fire Pony, a totally engaging and often very touching American story of the specially close relationship between two half-brothers, teenagers Roy and Joe. When we first meet them they are in the process of leaving behind unhappy memories of a foster home and hoping to find some temporary employment at a ranch where their expertise with horses will be valued and where they will have the chance to forget the past, especially Joe’s history of a dangerous attraction to fire. Their experiences at the ranch, their gradual integration into its small community and, above all, Roy’s emergence as a highly skilled horseman, provide the material for the remainder of Philbrick’s expertly paced story. The world of the ranch is a warm, protective place – the only villain, Mullins, is a rather two-dimensional character – but also a place which ‘goes all to pieces just when you least expect it’. There are some marvellously dramatic scenes, including an outstanding episode when a mountain lion breaks into the horses’ corral, and, best of all, a denouement featuring the fire which throughout the narrative has ‘burned inside’ Joe. With its echoes of various timeless American ‘cowboy’ stories, this is a novel with all the makings of a ‘classic’ in its own right. RD

Reviewer: 
Robert Dunbar
4
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