![]() ![]() Being a lover of horses is much like the book describes, so often it's full of heartache and death but if you are filled with the driving urge to be a horseperson then you will triumph and happiness too. But as I grew and understood more I Loved it more. Thanks for reading it! The first time I read it I hated it. Thanks, Sky, for continuing to encourage me to read Flicka! (I suspect it will also make you feel better to know that I am violently opposed to seeing the new movie remake of this book because I know they won't get it right.) I can't say I'll ever get that into them but it makes for an interesting adventure now and again. I applaud that and it makes me feel like I have enjoyed the book, in retrospect.īecause I like Sky and sorta have to admit that I like this book (to a degree only) I would be willing to read more books about horses. Not many authors have the ability to keep you on the edge of your seat not knowing whether you can relax or just cry. O'Hara also did a fine job of drawing a person into her story. Ken's love for Flicka was unquestionable. It's a story of loyalty which is a character trait I rather admire between friends. Having put a few days between myself and the story, I find that I like it much more. Some of which I still wish I didn't know. (Perhaps I should have spaced the two books more, eh?) At any rate, I suppose a did learn a thing or two about horses. I read this on the heels of reading Treasure Island and was "kept out" of the book by all the pirate lingo only to find myself again kept out of a story for not understanding the lingo. ![]() The other aspect of the book that made it somewhat difficult for me was all the horse lingo. Would she live? Would she die? It flip flopped so much that I didn't have any certainty as to the ending of the book being a good one. Flicka's own health, fragile as it was, also kept me on edge. I'm grateful he had one parent's attention but it was still irksome all the same. Ken knew his mom would listen when his dad would not. The fact that Nell was more attentive to Ken than to her other son, Howard, made me feel like Ken was more of a Mamma's Boy in the most unpleasant of ways. Rob didn't mean to be so oblivious to his son's feelings, but he really was! That bothered me a lot throughout the book. Ken's relationship with his father, Rob, seemed hopeless at times. My thoughts while reading it, and upon completion of it, was that I didn't really care for it. Then I made assurances that I actually WOULD read it. To put it mildly.) Being the loyal friend that I am, I, not liking horses quite so much, heartily agreed to read it. I read My Friend Flicka because my friend Sky highly recommended it.
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