A horse’s escape is major news for the creatures that live in the vicinity.
Creatures, plants, and even forces of nature have various reactions to the horse’s flight, including near panic, curiosity, and joy. A sheep and a cow run, with their bells clanging. Birds fly south, and a spider weaves a gigantic web. Clouds weep, and a beetle has a scary dream. Eggs are broken, and an eagle expresses its distress to the wind. Kids, both human and a goat, dance gleefully, a green fly bids farewell as it flies away, and a bright orange dragonlike comet shouts as it streaks across the sky. When children learn that the clouded skipper has lost a wing, a very careful examination—and an extra bit of research—might be needed. (Alert: A clouded skipper is a species of butterfly.) Through it all, the snowy-white horse seems totally unconcerned as it romps through the pages. The very sharply hued, colorful illustrations are set against a light, bright yellow. Flowers, clouds, and other entities appear to have recognizable, if distorted faces. Each reiteration of the title statement leads to a sequence of four events, told in a single descriptive large-print sentence. Each sequence is then completed by a warning in ever increasing sizes “WATCH OUT, WATCH OUT, the horse is out!” The last warning frames the horse’s leap into a night sky. And who is the goose in cowboy boots? Suspend all disbelief.
Visually stunning, highly imaginative, and delightfully baffling.
(Picture book. 4-8)