A girl competes on a dangerous horse in a Depression-era effort to save a family farm.
It’s not her family’s farm: Thirteen-year-old Beatrice Davis and her 8-year-old sister, Vivian, have been riding the rails with their father. Two years ago, when Daddy lost his bank job in Richmond, they lost everything, including Bea’s pony. Then Mama died. Now Daddy’s abandoned them in a hayloft belonging to Mama’s Sweet Briar College friend’s mother. The girls successfully stay hidden until Bea reveals their existence by saving one of Mrs. Scott’s horses from colic. Cantankerous Mrs. Scott allows them to stay in exchange for picking peaches but soon enlists Bea to help attract rich buyers by riding some of her horses in an upcoming show—including a beautiful chestnut who’s hurt several people. Elliott weaves in historical threads: near-historic droughts in Virginia in 1930 and 1932, 1919 race riots in which Black World War I veterans were attacked, the racially integrated Bonus Army’s 1932 march to Washington, and presidential hopeful Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s New Deal. Bea is a vivid, sympathetic character. She and Mrs. Scott stand up to their multitude of losses with brave honesty and pragmatism, and the victories they achieve feel earned. Elliott knows horses down to her toes. Main characters are White; major supporting character Malachi is a Black veteran blinded during a parade in the U.S. in honor of his regiment.
Hurrah for bold riders and the horses who love them.
(author’s note, selected sources) (Historical fiction. 9-14)