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Paperback The Black Stallion and the Shape-shifter Book

ISBN: 0375845321

ISBN13: 9780375845321

The Black Stallion and the Shape-shifter

(Part of the The Black Stallion (#23) Series and Black Stallion Returns (#4) Series)

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Recommended

Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

Alec Ramsay and the Black are back in a brand-new adventure. After being injured while racing in Ireland's famous Foster Stakes, the Black and Alec head to the Irish coast to recuperate. While there, they are intrigued by tales of the kelpie, a shape-shifting, horse-loving creature of myth who carries unsuspecting riders off to a watery grave. Alec meets a lonely local girl, Mora, who has found a stray pony. Recognizing her love of horses, Alec teaches...

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

True to The Black and Alec

I have been reading the stories of The Black and Alec since I was a kid. It aggravated my teachers to no end that the Walter Farley books were the only ones I ever bothered to read. Steven Farley has done a great job with the very essence of the relationship between Alec and his horse.

A fine horse story and mystery evolves

Walter Farley's son is taking up the reigns of his father's famous horse stories in producing a new addition to the old series, The Black Stallion and the Shape-Shifter. Here the Black and Alec Ramsey are heading to Ireland to recuperate from a racing injury, only to find a girl who loves horses is eager to learn to ride. When she vanishes after Alec agrees to teach her, villagers say she's been taken by a kelpie and is gone forever. Can there be such a thing as magic? A fine horse story and mystery evolves.

Good story with a few flaws.

The Black Stallion and the Shape-shifter is a nice addition to the Black Stallion Series. I read the plot for this book in October and was not sure then if it would work. I am happy to say it does. The Series has, from the beginning, some mystic, supernatural and science fiction elements running through it. And this book defintely has the supernatural elements. Steven used various elements from the multiple stories about the kelpie and wove them together into an exciting story. Alec and the Black's meeting of the kelpie on Long Island is a nice foreshadowing of what's to come. And when you meet the next one, you're not sure; is it or isn't it, but it seems so benign but isn't. He also refers to earlier books which will help anyone new to the series. For example: the desert island where Alec and the Black bond, Hopeful Farm, Satan and Pam. Also, this is the first book that acknowledges the passing of time from The Black Stallion,the first book, to this one. (Pg. 6) A nice surprise. Mora, the fourth main character, is the normal teenage of today: sees a pony, wants a pony, catch it and then rides it. And then races it!! Personally I would never have mounted a strange horse or pony no matter how much I wanted to. And to race it? Never. However, she is a better character than others I read in other horse fiction being written today. There are two races in this book. The Irish one which the Black is injuried in. And the last one. The most important one. Very good description of both these races. The negatives. The first review is correct on the misspelling of conformation. But this person reaction to this is strange. I have found words misspelled, missing, lines missing or attached to different paragraphs in many books. An author does review their work. But they know what they are saying and so a proofreader from the publisher usually reads their works. And then there's the publishing of the book. All of them can still miss a mistake. It happens and I have some of those samples to prove it. (The White Dragon paperback edition, the last Beastmaster book to name two that have errors in them.) Steven word usage in a few places read odd. Most of these were found in describing the Black's movement. And the Black is injuried...again. Can we please not have that happen in the next book? Overall I give this book a Good rating.
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