The Horsecatcher

The Horsecatcher
Author Mari Sandoz
Country United States
Language English
Genre Fantasy, Young-adult Fiction
Publisher Westminster Press
Publication date
1957
Media type Print
Pages 192 pp
ISBN 9780803291607

The Horsecatcher is a 1957 adolescent novel by author Mari Sandoz. The Horsecatcher was a Newbery Medal Honor Book in 1958.[1][2][2] The book is "dedicated to the two great Cheyennes named Elk River, both council chiefs and peace men, one Keeper of the Sacred Arrows of the Cheyenne Indians, the other the greatest horsecatcher of all the High Plains".[3]

Plot

Elk, a Southern Cheyenne adolescent, dresses plainly, doesn't care for ceremonials, has no interest in warfare and coup-counting and little more in hunting. He has undergone his fast, but nobody was quite able to figure out what his dream meant. He knows he's a disappointment to his father, Elk River, to his uncle Owl Friend, who founded a warrior society, and to his older brother Two Wolves. But he can't help what's in his heart. He wants to be a tamer of wild horses.

When we first meet Elk, he's slipped away from his village on a lone horse-hunt, hoping to catch Bear Colt. But despite hardship and deprivation and even almost getting accidentally killed by some of his own tribesmen, he succeeds, and that's worth the shaming he gets from his kin. Over the next two years Elk learns his chosen profession, along with the misunderstandings that come with it. Even when he bravely warns his village of approaching Kiowa raiders and kills one with his rabbit bow, he fails to see his accomplishment. Furthermore, after his brother is killed, along with his entire war party, he helps to save the tribe's great talismans. He then penetrates deep into Kiowa country, alone and afraid, to recover and bury the remains. For a culture that places great value on horses, it is surprising that no one seems ready to recognize what a real contribution he could make to his tribe.

Publishing History

This book was originally published in 1957 by The Westminster Press,[4] and was republished in 1986 by The University of Nebraska Press.[5] The book was also republished in German.[6]

Main characters

Film adaptations

As of 2015, the film adaptation of The Horsecatcher is in development.[7]

Critical reception

Many critics found The Horsecatcher to be a moving novel. The New York Times, asserted that "What gives this book stature . . . is Elk's quiet courage in defying tradition and finding his own place in his tribe and in life". The Christian Science Monitor,emphasized that "Mari Sandoz has written a beautiful story that is bright with warmth, humor, and love of life. It will provide rich and rewarding reading not only for older teens and young adults but also for grownups with a taste for uncomplicated goodness". The New York Herald Tribune Book Review, avowed that "This is a moving novel. . . . There is a fine sense of place, the wide plains, the canyons, the brushy gullies; a deep insight into the life of the Cheyennes and their firm and understand-ing way with their young people".[5] Kirkus Reviews found "Though simply carried out, the story thread is strengthened by its very quietude, its thoughtful examination of an Indian mind and the interweaving of Cheyenne customs with the lives of other tribes- Comanche, Ute and Kiowa."[8]

Awards

References

  1. "The Horsecatcher". Scholastic Teachers. Retrieved 28 April 2015.
  2. 1 2 "Books In Print". booksinprint.com. Retrieved 28 April 2015.
  3. Sandoz, Mari. The Horsecatcher. Philadelphia: Westminster Press, 1957. Print (5).
  4. http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/575967446
  5. 1 2 http://www.nebraskapress.unl.edu/product/Horsecatcher,673726.aspx
  6. http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/73721002
  7. "IMDB.com".
  8. "The Horsecatcher". www.kirkusreviews.com. Kirkus Media LLC. 15 August 1956. Retrieved 14 June 2015.
  9. Newbery Medal
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