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Saddle Club 47 - Horse Magic
Saddle Club 47 - Horse Magic
Oct 9, 2024 4:25 AM

Author:Bonnie Bryant

Saddle Club 47 - Horse Magic

It’s Halloween and Pine Hollow Stables is getting some special visitors – a group of city kids. The Saddle Club girls are planning a treasure hunt and trick-or-treating for the children. Best of all, Stevie Lake’s old school friend, Dinah, has come to help. Stevie can’t wait to pull some pranks on her friend!

Things go awry when it becomes clear that Dinah and Saddle Club member Lisa Atwood don’t like each other. Lisa suspects Dinah of flirting with Stevie’s boyfriend. Even worse, Stevie’s beginning to think the stable is haunted. Who’s playing tricks at Pine Hollow?

Reviews

It's a story about two sisters who run away from an orphanage and for young girls, it has everything going for it. There are wonderful descriptions of clothes, dolls and girls' friendships and an adventure. It was my favourite book when I was that age, too

—— Jacqueline Wilson , Independent

This tale of a marvellous year in the lives of two small waifs will charm readers old and young

—— New Yorker

Marvellous

—— Buffalo News

Nancy and Plum are lovable characters whom readers will be drawn to

—— School Library Journal

A lovely, forgotten classic that deserves to be reprinted

—— Jacqueline Wilson , The Times

A charming tale for readers old and new

—— Smallish

I read it a dozen-odd times as a child – and nowadays it’s my flu book. If I’m ever under the weather, I read it and cheer myself up

—— Jacqueline Wilson , Mail Online

As in the first volume there are plenty of heart-stopping moments and a generous dollop of gore, but nothing most teens and confident readers can't handle: in fact, the problem will be to persuade them to put the book down. In short, it's both gross and engrossing!

—— The Bookbag

The Whispering Skull frees Stroud to let his flair for spectacle run riot, resulting in several deftly constructed set-pieces far more akin to true horror than the ghost house antics of the first book.

—— Starburst

As in the first instalment, Stroud manages to perfectly balance grisly encounters with gleefully sarcastic humour.

—— Independent Children's blog

This is quality reading for young and old. Bring on those ghosts, but first hand me my rapier!

—— Ann Giles, Bookwitch

There's a dark, macabre air to these books that Stroud handles with an expert touch, perfectly balancing the supernatural with witty repartee and serpentine plots (no one could ever accuse Stroud of dumbing down). After The Screaming Staircase, our trio is back with a second instalment to sort out a seriously creepy talking skull trapped inside a glass jar. Ghost-busting has never been more engrossing.

—— Dad.info Blog

The spine-tingling performance of Lyons’ narration will keep listeners on the edge of their seat.

—— YALSA committee
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