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Hardcover Girl on a Pony (Western Frontier Library) Book

ISBN: 0806126248

ISBN13: 9780806126241

Girl on a Pony (Western Frontier Library)

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

Girl on a Pony is the gritty, humorous, unflinchingly courageous story of five children growing up on a cattle ranch in the remote Valley of the Dry Cimarron in northeastern New Mexico near the little... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

Laverne was my Aunt

I knew many of the people Laverne talked about in this book. In my teen years, I spent a few weeks staying with my uncle Jiggs Collins. Jiggs lived in Trinidad when I first stayed at his house. He had a wild baby bobcat residing in his living room that winter. Jiggs introduced me to the songs of Ramblin Jack Elliot. Jiggs was a LADIES man. Lots of ladies loved the old guy. He was one of the nicest and most considerate men I ever met, except that he could not manage to keep appointments. Jiggs's brother Bob said that Jiggs "woke up in a new world every morning." I asked Laverne why she loved Jiggs. She said he was handsome and was a gentle lover. He was not gentle when he killed a bear or rode a horse. Jiggs moved to Weston and built a stone house at age 60+. He built it from scratch, working the stone then setting it. I miss him. I agree, this story would make a great movie.

A powerful woman's jewel

You wouldn't guess at the power of this book from it's size. As finely written as the complicated, intricately tatted lace fancywork Laverne's mother tatted into bleached sugar sacks, "still whole after fifty years." Stories as gripping and gritty as anything Hemingway ever wrote, featuring hailstorms that break every window in the house, treacherous horses, dogs, and rattlesnakes, and scandalous cowboys. Frequent flashes of wise, deep humor, understated and droll, that catches you unawares and leaves you laughing out loud. This was a woman worthy of the name. Would make a terrific movie.

Funny and honest life of a girl growing up in the desert

I wish you could all have met Dr. Hanners! Janet Reno wrote to Dr. Hanners praising her mutual memory of growing up wild and free while trying to control nature and nature in the form of a pony. These are real people, many of whom still live in Kenton, Oklahoma, population 52.
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