cover image If a Horse Had Words

If a Horse Had Words

Kelly Cooper, illus. by Lucy Eldridge. Tundra, $17.99 (48p) ISBN 978-1-10191-872-2

In her first book for children, Canadian author Cooper offers a tale of a foal and her boy that blends the scope of a novel with the grace of a poem. Born on a spring morning, the foal tries out her long legs and sinks into a badger hole, from which she’s hauled out by a man and his freckled, cowboy-hatted companion: “If a horse had words,” Cooper writes, in a phrase that serves as the story’s title and leitmotif, “the word would be... boy.” Boy and foal watch the seasons change contentedly together until one day, the boy tries to ride her, and she tosses him. She has to go, the man says, and, in a wrenching moment, she’s auctioned off. But she meets the boy again in a triumphant moment that redeems their separation. Cooper’s lilting voice dances through the story, while folk-naive watercolors by Eldridge, in her picture-book debut, capture the foal’s lovely lines. Readers drawn to stories about the unbreakable bonds between children and animals will remember this one. Ages 4–8. [em](June) [/em]