Oh, to be a horse!
Shakespeare’s Richard III begged for one, going so far as to offer his kingdom. This delightful book proposes the idea—if ever so briefly and if only in the imagination—of being one. Think of what you could try, see, and do—or not do—if you were a horse. What fun! What, ahem, unbridled freedom could be had! Each page in this charmer contains one easy sentence or phrase that expresses an idea about “horsiness,” allowing very young listeners or emergent readers to focus on the clear, simple language and to follow up with their own imaginative responses. The young narrator muses about what life would be like as a horse: galloping all day long, rolling around in the mud, giving a (human) sibling a ride to school, and getting to run around without clothes on (“unless I was in a PARADE”). Grown-ups sharing the book in a one-on-one or group setting should encourage children to engage in rich, speculative conversation about the advantages and disadvantages of being a horse. The colorful, sweet, gently humorous illustrations depicting an unfettered horse running freely and also in cozy, familial, and neighborhood settings were created with watercolor, gouache, pencil, fabric, and wallpaper and assembled digitally. The protagonist’s human family is brown-skinned; other humans are racially diverse. (This book was reviewed digitally.)
There’ll be no neigh-sayers for this one.
(Picture book. 3-6)