
Ralph Thompson (1) (1913–2009)
Author of Animals through the Eyes of an Artist
For other authors named Ralph Thompson, see the disambiguation page.
Series
Works by Ralph Thompson
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Thompson, Ralph Shillito
- Birthdate
- 1913-06-03
- Date of death
- 2009-05-03
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Royal College of Art
Leeds College of Art - Occupations
- artist
book illustrator - Awards and honors
- MBE (2004)
- Nationality
- UK
- Birthplace
- Thorner, Yorkshire, England, UK
- Place of death
- Thorner, Leeds, Yorkshire, England, UK
- Associated Place (for map)
- Yorkshire, England, UK
Members
Reviews
A brumby is an Australian wild horse, and this tale by Elyne Mitchell is the first of a series, which as far as I knew was of just four books, this, The Silver Brumby’s Daughter, Silver Brumbies of the South, and Silver Brumby Kingdom. Looking on the internet now, I see there are more – maybe I should read them!
The Silver Brumby of the title is Thowra, a cream-coloured wild horse in the Australian Snowy Mountains, whose coat turns silver in winter. The first book deals with his birth and show more growing up, all the way through to finding his first mate. There are challenges for supremacy between the reigning stallions on the territory, and in time Thowra throws down his own challenge. I loved the way the terrain is described, and what was then exotic wild plants and animals. A pair of wise kangaroos features, as do an opossum and various birds including kookaburras, sulphur-crested cockatoos and galahs. I vividly imagined all these creatures. Having a map at the start of the book helped me imagine the terrain too.
I first read these book when I was about fourteen, so I was surprised to see the date on the copies I have, which suggests I bought them when I was 21! My horse-obsession hasn’t waned much in the meantime, so I recommend these tales for horse-lovers of any age, although the book imprint itself is described as ‘for older boys and girls’.
Unlike my own stories, Elyne Mitchell places Thowra firmly in a natural setting, with realistic interactions between the herds and his search for his own mates. Horse whisperers and would-be horse whisperers will be happy with the treatment. The events that present them with life-threatening dangers are appropriate and normal extremes in the Australian climate. What I didn’t appreciate was that the terrain described is real. I was lucky enough to visit Thredbo on an Australian trip, and checking the map in the Youth Hostel, I found I was right on the edge of the Cascades, where Thowra was born. A hike the next day took me into the Cascades and to my delight, we found some brumbies – brown and black ones, but still brumbies!
I still love these stories, and I recommend them to horse lovers of any age, and indeed any younger children with good reading skills looking for an exciting wildlife adventure. I mentioned ‘forever books’ on a blog recently – these are ones that have been carried round all the places I’ve lived and stayed on my shelf rather than boxes in the attic. Precious stories indeed! show less
The Silver Brumby of the title is Thowra, a cream-coloured wild horse in the Australian Snowy Mountains, whose coat turns silver in winter. The first book deals with his birth and show more growing up, all the way through to finding his first mate. There are challenges for supremacy between the reigning stallions on the territory, and in time Thowra throws down his own challenge. I loved the way the terrain is described, and what was then exotic wild plants and animals. A pair of wise kangaroos features, as do an opossum and various birds including kookaburras, sulphur-crested cockatoos and galahs. I vividly imagined all these creatures. Having a map at the start of the book helped me imagine the terrain too.
I first read these book when I was about fourteen, so I was surprised to see the date on the copies I have, which suggests I bought them when I was 21! My horse-obsession hasn’t waned much in the meantime, so I recommend these tales for horse-lovers of any age, although the book imprint itself is described as ‘for older boys and girls’.
Unlike my own stories, Elyne Mitchell places Thowra firmly in a natural setting, with realistic interactions between the herds and his search for his own mates. Horse whisperers and would-be horse whisperers will be happy with the treatment. The events that present them with life-threatening dangers are appropriate and normal extremes in the Australian climate. What I didn’t appreciate was that the terrain described is real. I was lucky enough to visit Thredbo on an Australian trip, and checking the map in the Youth Hostel, I found I was right on the edge of the Cascades, where Thowra was born. A hike the next day took me into the Cascades and to my delight, we found some brumbies – brown and black ones, but still brumbies!
I still love these stories, and I recommend them to horse lovers of any age, and indeed any younger children with good reading skills looking for an exciting wildlife adventure. I mentioned ‘forever books’ on a blog recently – these are ones that have been carried round all the places I’ve lived and stayed on my shelf rather than boxes in the attic. Precious stories indeed! show less
It has been over 30 years since I last owned this Little booklet which was distributed through the Reader's Digest around 1981. It was around the same size as one of those old cigarette or PG Tips tea card albums, and about as many pages long, but I remember being inspired by the artist's work all the same.
It seems likely that this was a give-away, or it may have come bundled with another more substantial book, probably David Attenborough's Augmented Edition of Life on Earth if I remember show more rightly.
For what it was the illustrations were very captivating to my young eyes at the time. I may have even copied a few of the drawings myself. If I recall it was the lynx and perhaps the fox. show less
It seems likely that this was a give-away, or it may have come bundled with another more substantial book, probably David Attenborough's Augmented Edition of Life on Earth if I remember show more rightly.
For what it was the illustrations were very captivating to my young eyes at the time. I may have even copied a few of the drawings myself. If I recall it was the lynx and perhaps the fox. show less
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 6
- Also by
- 8
- Members
- 75
- Popularity
- #235,803
- Rating
- 3.8
- Reviews
- 2
- ISBNs
- 20
- Languages
- 1

