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The second spin-off is a series of young adult books focusing on Carole Hanson, Stevie Lake, and Lisa Atwood approximately four years after the events of The Saddle Club series. The Long Ride (7/6/1998) The Trail Home (9/8/1998) Reining In (11/10/1998) Changing Leads (1/12/1999) Conformation Faults (1/5/1999) Shying at Trouble (1/12/1999)
A spin-off series was announced by the author and her publishers in 2009, called Pony Club Rivals. This series features a new main character, Georgie Parker, and is set in the UK and the USA. The first book in the series, Pony Club Rivals: The Auditions, was published in the UK in April 2010. It is based in Kentucky USA at the school Blainford ...
The Pony Tails books are a spinoff series aimed at young readers ages 7–10. They focus on May Grover, Corey Takamura, and Jasmine James, who are also riders at Pine Hollow and form their own club called the Pony Tails. The Pine Hollow books are a spinoff series aimed at teen and young adult readers. They focus on the same characters four ...
In television, Betancourt has garnered the National Psychological Award for Excellence in the Media, two Humanitas Awards, and six Emmy Award nominations. [1]Betancourt has also won numerous awards for her novels, including a Children's Choice Award from the International Reading Association and the Children's Book Council for Sweet Sixteen and Never... and a Lifetime Achievement Award.
The "Pine Hollow" series focuses on The Saddle Club's teenage years. The first book was published in July 1998, and Full Gallop, the seventeenth and last book, was published in April 2001. Although the last few Saddle Club books were published after Full Gallop, it is the last book set chronologically in the Willow Creek universe.
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The 1877 novel Black Beauty, although about a horse and not a pony, is seen as a forerunner of pony book fiction. [1] [2] Pony books themselves began to appear in the late 1920s. [1] In 1928 British lifestyle magazine Country Life published Golden Gorse's The Young Rider which went to a second edition in 1931, and a third in 1935. In the ...
Pony books form a genre in children's literature of stories featuring children, teenagers, ponies and horses, and the learning of equestrian skills, especially at a pony club or riding school. The genre is generally idealistic, featuring fantasies of perfect friendship with an idealized companion animal.