“The Golden Spark” exhibiting at the 2011 MLA Conference

The Golden Spark | Book 2 of The Legend of the Great Horse trilogy will be exhibiting at the 2011 Massachusetts Library Association (MLA) Annual Conference (Danvers, MA April 26-29, 2011).

The MLA is a professional library association that “advocates for libraries, librarians, and library staff, defends intellectual freedom, and provides a forum for leadership, communication, professional development, and networking to keep libraries vital.”

The theme of this year’s MLA Annual Conference is “Get Ready to be a Super(hero) Librarian!”

Why I Write about Horses

It can be hard to write about horses and not be misunderstood. Most people seem decided about horses one way or another (mostly another), and conventional “wisdom” I’ve known tends to dismiss horses and their activities as outdated and obsolete.

The misunderstanding is understandable: we humans have always been a few flakes short of a bale when it comes to our equine partner … the writ-large story of horsemanship is one of human ignorance staggering toward a cooperative path it wants nothing of, until some innovation in cavalry tops the ridge and a new way is more or less happily accepted (mostly much less).

When I tell people I’m writing a fiction adventure about horses in history, reactions vary. Some smile in a rush of good feelings and memories (these we call ‘horsepeople’), some are intrigued; other’s eyes dart away with a short nod and change of subject, or peer at me curiously trying to grasp why a grown man would spend time writing about ‘horsies.’

Horse Talk

Well, I don’t write about ‘horsies’ — no author does — but about an animal, a force, that has been an essential partner in civilization. I write to honor the intangible spirit in horses which sparks humanity’s creative impulses, a spirit which has served as mankind’s inner guide by providing a concrete image of noble humility, courage and selfless service. Discussions about horses deal in ideas that created the cultures we live in and have succeeded. Horse talk is really about humanity.

We can speak about horses in bold terms and not be embarrassed: it is hard to find expressive terms to describe how close and longstanding man’s partnership with the horse truly is. History has moved to the sound of hoofbeats since prehistoric man enshrined horses on cave walls, and celebration of our partnership has ennobled mankind throughout recorded time.

Is the great ride over?

Is mankind ready to dismount and proceed into the terrifying future alone? This is a graver decision than the attention it is given.

Yes, we have machines to replace buggies and hoofed cavalry … but perhaps we should consider the lessons of the countless cultures that rested upon the status quo of their horsemanship–and were overridden by newly-discovered potential in the horse.

Today horsemanship’s ancient roles of youth development, leadership training and community-fostering deserve examination, and there are exciting new roles to explore in horse-powered ‘green’ commerce, recreation, and healing so relevant to our crowded future.

It may even be that the ancients were correct in believing the horse was a gift of the Creator, and the future belongs to horsemen as much as did the past.

My answer to skeptics? Horse talk is more than it seems.

#64- Sea of Equines

Riding on, Meagan could see the approaching black cloud was actually an enormous congregation of horses and riders spreading across the horizon, waves of bobbing movement stretching beyond sight. – Eclipsed by Shadow (excerpt)

A tall, dark thoroughbred would be easy to pick out, but of course was nowhere to be seen…

Riding on, Meagan could see the approaching black cloud was actually an enormous congregation of horses and riders spreading across the horizon, waves of bobbing movement stretching beyond sight. In all directions a herd of free horses nipped the beaten earth. Dust rose in a column that clouded the sun to a dull orange ball.

The air thickened with dust and scent as they rode closer. A tremendous sound of insects’ buzzing met them at the edge of the moving population. Meagan drew her tunic over her face until only the barest slit enabled her to see, and brushed away flies that boldly crawled in to find her eyes and mouth. Horse tails flicked in concert around her.

All of the sea of equines were pony-sized, with shaggy coats and brushy manes. Meagan shielded her eyes to look over the endless congregation of weathered people riding in loose jackets and pants.

_____

The Legend of the Great Horse trilogy is an adventure through history … each section is about a different time period.

The above excerpt is the 4th section of Eclipsed by Shadow, in which Meagan finds herself in medieval Europe. (p. 179 Hbk)

Eclipsed by Shadow (Book #1 of the trilogy) won national awards including the Eric Hoffer Award for best Young Adult Fiction, and the Mom’s Choice Award for best family-friendly Young Adult Fantasy.

__________

Quick Links:

The Legend of the Great Horse trilogy

“Thrilling and intelligent fantasy … a great blend of academic and adventurous reading that is beach-ready.” ~ US Review of Books

The Legend of the Great Horse trilogy is an award-winning adventure about horsemanship in civilization … history comes alive as a teenager travels back in time and experiences how horses were used in the past.

Book I: Eclipsed by Shadow, begins the tale as young Meagan Roberts discovers her new foal is a Great Horse of legend … and is carried into an incredible adventure in history.

Eclipsed by Shadow won mainstream critical acclaim and national awards including the 2009 Eric Hoffer Award for Young Adult Fiction.

The story travels through prehistoric times when man’s interest in the horse was strictly culinary…

… and follows Meagan as she struggles to survive the harrowing thrills of Roman chariot racing, the hordes of Genghis Khan, and a season of chivalry among castles, Tournaments and knights.

Book II: The Golden Spark,
was published to the trade in April 2011 …  continuing the ‘road-trip’ adventure amid a colorful cast of accurately-portrayed historical characters from the European Renaissance.

In this installment, our heroine finds herself an unwitting stowaway aboard a Spanish conquistador’s ship, rides among nobility at the Court of Versailles, and joins the struggles of a farming family in Merry Old England of the 1800’s.

2011 Independent Publisher Highlighted Title

LibraryThing Early Review Title