Reading History

Learning about history doesn’t require classroom time or tedious study. Knowledge and enthusiasm for history can be gained through fun, readable books–both fiction and non-fiction–that shine an interesting light into the past … it is only a matter of finding ones that ignite your curiosity.

Whether you’d like to know more about a particular era from Eclipsed by Shadow (Book #1 of The Legend of the Great Horse trilogy) or simply wish to explore ancient history, the above books rank among the very best for sparking new interest in readers.

» For further reading, see the Eclipsed by Shadow bibliography.

Why Show Jumping?

By John Royce – My new project Clean-Round.com and many of my online shares are about Show Jumping rather than other horse sports I also love … I’d like to explain.

What some might call an unreasonable passion in my life has been to help connect people with horses in the modern era. My first love was Western and I believe there is no greater spectacle in sport than international Eventing’s cross-country. I respect Dressage’s empathetic quest for unity as both art and a hallowed touchstone of human progress. I enjoy watching Polo and see Driving as a moving homage to history and tradition. I love the races. It’s all good…

Gerco Schröder riding LONDON in the Gucci Grand Prix of Abu Dhabi - Photo: Sportfot/GCTThe reason I focus on show jumping is that it has three basic qualities that, in my view, give it the potential to connect an ‘un-horsed’ populace with its ancient legacy of horsemanship.

(1) As a necessary first condition, show jumping is humane and promotes higher standards in horse care, training and riding. Though not without issues, the official sport is zero-tolerance for drugs, abuse, or horse endangerment, including lameness or other pain. Beyond the rules, the challenge of jumping itself mitigates against bad treatment: horses do not jump well when afraid or uncomfortable. Bad behavior happens in any human endeavor, but in show jumping abuse is a path to injury and wasted investment—not success. The sport is beneficial to both horses and people, and inclines to the positive.

(2) The sport is amazingly adaptable to modern life. Though very young—the roots of horse jumping date only from the mid-18th Century—show jumping has now been contested all around the world on all kinds of surfaces, natural and artificial, from dirt lots to tanbark, snow, sand, and turf. The format is flexible and varied, with multiple levels of competition for all ages, both sexes and a wide accommodation of skill levels and economic backgrounds. It fits into spaces from small arenas to large stadiums, rural to urban, indoor and outdoor. The challenge of show jumping can be modified to meet a wide range of conditions and specifications.

(3)The third reason I share about show jumping is something rather unique in equestrian sport: it was conceived and created as a public spectator attraction. The sport was formed by accident, in response to spectator requests. Obstacles scattered across the countryside were brought in to include the audience—and something magical occurred. The spectacle became sport, and more than that, it became a game the horse understood and would play with us. People don’t watch sport so much as they watch games … and by being a game, when presented well, the sport can connect millions of people to the excitement and beauty of horses. Spectator interest has been integral to show jumping from its inception to its success today, and is a foundation which can be built upon.

Rich Fellers (USA) riding Flexible winner of the Rolex FEI World Cup™ Final 2012. - Photo: Kit Houghton/FEIIt’s true the sport has had growing pains and problematic historical legacies and associations. Show jumping may not be quite ready for prime time in some ways: but it can be made ready, and along the way do a great deal of good for horses and (imo) greater humanity.

Humane benefits, flexibility to adapt to the modern era, and because spectator interest is intrinsically part of the sport–these are the reasons why I focus on sharing about Show Jumping!

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“Into the Dark” featured in Childrens Bookwatch

Book III: Into the Dark | The Legend of the Great Horse trilogy (bookcover)Into the Dark was featured in the June 2013 edition of Children’s Bookwatch. The concluding 3rd book of the Legend of the Great Horse trilogy was one of seven fiction titles selected.

Children’s Bookwatch is a well-respected listing by the long-time champion of independent work, the Midwest Book Review … each selection is taken from hundreds of submissions each month to highlight the best new independent titles.

» See featured review

» See Children’s Bookwatch June 2013

The Bright Side of the Dark Ages: Stirrups!

“It is surprising that horsemen took 1,500 years to think up something so simple. One is reluctantly driven to the distasteful conclusion that we are not really a very bright set of people.”–Charles Chenevix-Trench (1914-2003), A History of Horsemanship

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0579_haniwa-horse_c550AD_225pxOne positive thing about the Dark Ages was that horseback ‘barbarians’ invaded, pillaged, and burned using a new development that today we call stirrups–an innovation that revolutionized cavalry and greatly eased saddle-soreness.

Stirrups increased cavalry’s effectiveness against infantry and allowed for the creation of new heavy cavalry with lances. Horses could be ridden faster and for longer distances: the gallop is easier for the animal if its rider stands in stirrups, and stirrups make trotting much more pleasant.

People had ridden in saddles for over a thousand years without stirrups, and the intellectual tone of the era makes it likely people would have gone another thousand without the bracing illustration of an arrow-spewing nomad bearing down at a fast gallop. The device was quickly copied and by 600 AD were spreading throughout Europe.

INTO THE DARK coming out in paperback …

Into the Dark (bookcover)

The final volume of the award-winning trilogy, The Legend of the Great Horse, is being released in paperback Fall 2013.

Into the Dark brings a triumphant conclusion to the adventure that has traveled the history of mankind. Hoofbeats thunder into the modern age, where love of horses preserves the partnership that made civilization.

The hardback edition can be found at Amazon and Barnes & Noble, and is available through local libraries and bookstores.

The story is a well-researched and fast-paced tale following the adventures of a modern equestrienne lost in history.  The trilogy books have won national awards including the Eric Hoffer Award (Book #1) and the Written Arts Award (Book #2).

Amazon Hall of Fame Reviewer: Into the Dark “a display of equine fireworks”

New review by Into the Dark, Book #3 of The Legend of the Great Horse trilogy, by Amazon Hall of Fame Reviewer E.A. Lovitt:

E. A. Lovitt | Amazon Hall of Fame Reviewer 5-Star Review

“WORTH THE WAIT”

Book III of The Legend of the Great Horse concludes John Royce’s sweeping historical fantasy about horses and horsemanship with a display of equine fireworks that made it well worth the wait. The ending was satisfying on both a philosophical and emotional level. The author’s heroine, Meagan Roberts grows into a believable young woman, much of that growth (as with most of us) rooted in pain and sorrow. I was sorry to say good-bye to her and all of the Great Horses that accompanied her on her wild journey through time.

Much of Into the Dark takes place in Texas and Kentucky just as America’s brutal Civil War is heating up. When Royce takes time with his characters, as he did in this section, they are infused with life. When Meagan has to choose between her Great Horse and her new-found love, the reader will understand and share in that agonizing decision.

I was especially fond of the two 20th Century vignettes about horses that I already knew and loved: Man O’War and the British pony, Stroller who earned (along with his rider) a silver medal in the 1968 Olympics. The section on Man O’War reminded me very much of Walter Farley’s book about this great Thoroughbred, who was portrayed by both authors as a fiery, almost mythological beast that burned his way down the race track and into our dreams. On the other hand, the section on Stroller’s competition in the 1968 team jumping event almost broke my heart. The author draws on his own deep knowledge of equestrian sport and of the equine heart to give his readers an understanding of just what Stroller accomplished. It reminded me of the race caller’s description of the great Zenyatta as she finished first in the Breeders’ Cup Classic: “This is one we’ll never forget!”

Good-bye, Meagan. This is one we’ll never forget.

» See review on Amazon

graphic image of knight chesspieceInto the Dark is the 3rd book of The Legend of the Great Horse trilogy, an award winning time-travel adventure through history—on horseback! The story follows the journey of a modern horsewoman lost in the distant past.

The trilogy books have won multiple national awards including the 2009 Eric Hoffer Award for best Young Adult Fiction, and the 2010 Mom’s Choice Award for best family-friendly Young Adult Fantasy.

Further information about this unique ‘creative non-fiction’ novel can be found at  TheGreatHorse.com.

Book Review: Eclipsed by Shadow is a “rollicking historical action adventure through time”

ECLIPSED BY SHADOW is a rollicking historical action adventure through time. Awesome, right? It’s even young adult! And it incorporates a flying horse! What more could I need in life? I’m not exactly one for fantasy, but this book is heavy on the historical, and being a history and classical studies girl, I guess this just hit my complicated array of switches, levers and buttons.—Whitebrook Farm

The following is a review of Eclipsed by Shadow, Book #1 of The Legend of the Great Horse trilogy by Whitebrook Farm:

Eclipsed by Shadow | Trotting through History

Eclipsed by Shadow is the first book of the historical adventure trilogy, The Legend of the Great Horse, a journey through the ages when horses were everyday companions in work, war, sport and spectacle. The story is told through the eyes of a young woman, a horse-crazy teenager traveling through time with a knowledge of 21st Century horsemanship as her only defense.

So I know what you’re thinking, and it’s probably “her horsemanship had better be fantastic.” Or maybe that was just me?

Eclipsed by Shadow is a rollicking historical action adventure through time. Awesome, right? It’s even young adult! And it incorporates a flying horse! What more could I need in life? I’m not exactly one for fantasy, but this book is heavy on the historical, and being a history and classical studies girl, I guess this just hit my complicated array of switches, levers and buttons.

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