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Phoebe Erickson

Author of Wildwing

19+ Works 278 Members 1 Review

About the Author

Works by Phoebe Erickson

Associated Works

The Adventures of Peter Cottontail (1914) — Illustrator, some editions — 1,308 copies, 6 reviews
Best in Children's Books 10 (1958) — Illustrator — 177 copies, 1 review
Best in Children's Books 07 (1958) — Illustrator — 112 copies
Best in Children's Books 31 (1960) — Illustrator — 104 copies
Best in Children's Books 21 (1959) — Illustrator — 102 copies
Best in Children's Books 25 (1959) — Illustrator — 101 copies
Best in Children's Books 34 (1960) 96 copies
Best in Children's Books 35 (1960) — Illustrator — 91 copies, 1 review
Best in Children's Books 24 (1959) — Illustrator — 88 copies
Best in Children's Books 13 (1958) — Illustrator — 85 copies
Best in Children's Books 38 (1960) — Illustrator — 85 copies
Black Beauty (Picture-Story Adaptation) (1949) — Illustrator — 70 copies, 1 review
On Cherry Street (1948) — Illustrator — 66 copies
The Littlest Reindeer (1946) — Illustrator — 63 copies
We Are Neighbors (1948) — Illustrator — 48 copies
Finding New Neighbors (1957) — Illustrator — 42 copies
Little Peter Cottontail (1956) — Illustrator — 31 copies
Bambi's Children Adapted for Ages 5 to 10 (1950) — Illustrator — 15 copies
Sea Shells (1953) — Illustrator — 11 copies, 1 review
Baby Animal Stories (1949) — Illustrator — 6 copies
The Thornton W. Burgess Nature Almanac (1949) — Illustrator — 4 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1907
Gender
female

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Reviews

1 review
Nice animal story, the kind that would have really appealed to me in as a kid (and I’m glad can still appreciate now). Wild horses are being round up by helicopter in a canyon area of Wyoming. A boy of the Arapahoe tribe who lives nearby with his family, watches from hiding and is appalled at how relentlessly the helicopter chases the terrified horses, many which fall aside broken-winded or collapse from exhaustion. It turns out the helicopter pilot chased the horses at the wrong moment, show more and people on the ground aren’t there to help corrall the horses (wayyy pre-cell-phone era!) so the boy subtly helps them escape the canyon. He finds a colt lying on the ground, it’s mother nearby dead. He takes the colt home and tries to raise it, names it Wildwing.

Things go well for a while but then Wildwing becomes listless and unwell. Going back to the wild herd, the boy finds a mare that has recently lost a foal, and manages to get the two to accept each other. He is broken-hearted at leaving his colt with the wild mare, but knows it has the best chance of recovery that way. Through the weeks and months that follow, he often goes into the brush canyons to re-encounter Wildwing and his adopted mother. The colt still recognizes him and being calm, encourages the mare to accept the boy’s presence too. Back home, the boy’s family has difficulties because the father traded their pinto horse for an unreliable car, and they move residences with the change of seasons each year so need good transportation.

While the parents are absent (father off doing who knows what- he seemed unreliable- and mother gone into town to sell some beadwork she made), the boy and his twin sister coax Wildwing and the mare to the house, hoping to tame the mare and have two horses for the family. They run into problems trying to feed the horses (no good grazing nearby) but then an accident on an adjacent road provides them with a windfall of hay and oats (long story short, a truck hauling it crashes, and the men don’t want to bother climbing down into the canyon gorge to retrieve the spilled load). The ending was kind of ambiguous- the family is making progress taming the mare, but then there’s a vague description of a wild buckskin stallion in the future- suggesting that Wildwing was eventually living free? or maybe just that his spirit always was free, I don’t know. It was nice, though.

I liked how the horses were described- their actions felt very real, down to the little things like body language gestures. The people were all interesting- the boy and his sister described as level-headed and relatively calm, with a serene mother and rather irresponsible father. There’s a grandfather in the story too, who refuses to learn or use any English The others speak a mixture of English and their native language, they switch depending on the situation. The only characters who felt comical were the white men, portrayed as rather foolish and inept, and full of misconceptions about the Arapahoe- which the boy pointed out to them at one point. It felt very well-rounded.
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Statistics

Works
19
Also by
22
Members
278
Popularity
#83,542
Rating
4.1
Reviews
1
ISBNs
9

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