Very simple textually is Catherine Hapka’s Pony Crazy (and Anne Kennedy’s accompanying artwork is perhaps just a bit cartoon like for me but also colourful and supremely sweet, with her, with Kennedy’s ponies looking realistic and also in my opinion totally and utterly loveable).
But of course, since Pony Crazy is clearly meant and conceptualised for very young and recently independent readers (and in particular little girls interested in horses and ponies), a narrative, a text must quite by necessity be as uncomplicated as possible, and which Pony Crazy totally does follow and verbally demonstrate. And indeed, the short and basic sentence structure and vocabulary choices notwithstanding, my inner child is certainly feeling totally warmly delighted with and by Pony Crazy, for the three main protagonists sweetly show how their friendship is cemented by their mutual love of ponies (and yes, the simplicity of Catherine’s Hapka’s narrative certainly also does not change the wonderful fact that thematically and content wise, all the presented information about ponies are both realistic and correct and that therefore, Pony Crazy is not just a sweet equine based story of mutual friendship but also quite educational about general horsemanship and pony care, but that there is yet and happily no riding shown in Pony Crazy, which I actually think is something positive as far too often picture books and simple chapter books about equines often almost immediately move to depicting children on the back of horses as though riding is something easy and not ever requiring effort, which is simply not the case in reality).
Four stars for Pony Crazy, and a book, a narrative really and specifically made for younger readers, and as such also most definitely the type of tale that for horse crazed early childhood me would have been totally and delightfully loved loved loved. And really, the only reason why I am not considering five stars for Pony Crazy is that I do wish that the three pony obsessed main characters were not three young girls but perhaps two young girls and a little (as being interested in ponies, horses, horseback riding etc. is so very often still considered such a totally girlie hobby that it really would be appreciated if in Pony Crazy Catherine Hapka were not to adhere so strongly and overtly to the “only girls like ponies” stereotype, as ponies, as horses are for everyone, for both males and females, for both girls and boys).