Beauty Books


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Beauty
Black Beauty (Audio CD Classics Collection)
Published in Audio CD by The Clever Factory (2006)
Author:
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New price: $5.98

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Collect Them All!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-09
Part of the Audio CD Classics Collection these CDs are great for family listening on the road or at home! Whether you are presenting them to your children or grandchildren or adding them to your personal library, you will enjoy these tales of adventure, intrigue, and excitement as if hearing them for the first time!

Beauty
Black Beauty (Great Illustrated Classics)
Published in Library Binding by Abdo Publishing Company (2002-01)
Authors: Anna Sewell and Deidre S. Laiken
List price: $21.35
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Love of horses for this book as a gem!!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2002-07-16
I love Black Beauty (Great Illustrated Classics) & I love Black Beauty & horses & the color black

I will sometime get the new Black Beauty book Illustrated by Tom LaPadula...

This book is adapted by Deidre S. Laiken & the cover illustration is by Rick Whipple...

Black Beauty could be a black quarter horse with a white star & a white foot.

In Chapter 15. called "Our New Home", there is a picture on page 127 & the picture is John says Good-bye. John Manly is saying goodbye to Black Beauty & Ginger. John Manly goes around to Black Beauty & Ginger in a soft loving voice. Then John sounded very sad because he would miss Black Beauty & Ginger & it reminds me of Darryl Worley's song called "I miss my friend" & it makes me sad because it is probably about missing a friend. It could be on vacation & it could be other places.
Black Beauty holds his face close to John, & was the only way he could say good-bye. Before when Mr. Manly was gone, Black Beauty never saw him again.

My favorite chapter is called "My Last Home" because Joe Green & Black Beauty are home again together at Farmer Thoroughgood's place...

Black Beauty tells the story of his life & Black Beauty would be a roping horse, rodeo performer & more stuff.

If Black Beauty was at a fight & they burned down the barn in the chapter the fire, the would take the horses out of the barn & the other 2 would be dead & Black Beauty & Ginger are still alive & not killed in the fire.
They people would fight outside the barn & land in the water where the horses drink & get all wet.

I loved this book full of joy!!!

I loved it!!!

Beauty
Black Beauty (Troll Illustrated Classics)
Published in Paperback by Troll Communications (1999-12-31)
Authors: Anna Sewell and Tom Lapadula
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Average review score:

Black Beauty (Troll Illustrated Classics) ever!...
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-10
I like this book called "Black Beauty" & it's my favorite book because of horses & the color black.

I like this book & it's my favorite one.

Tom LaPadula illustrated the pictures in the book.

You can buy both the book & Black Beauty (Animated Version) on DVD on amazon.com & it will make you the king of wild horses.

I have read Black Beauty before & I think he could be an American Quarter Horse.

Black Beauty is a gem!...

The Troll Illustrated Classics, are the best.

You can buy on amazon.com Huckleberry Finn, Black Beauty, Tom Sawyer & The Jungle Book the troll illustrated classics one.

This book Black Beauty (Troll Illustrated Classics) reminds me of a book called "Fact or Fiction: Cowboys" by author Stewart Ross.

I loved it!...

I hope everyone enjoys it!...

I loved it!...

Beauty
Black Beauty (Young Reading Gift Books)
Published in Hardcover by Usborne Books (2006-01)
Authors: Anna Sewell and Mary Sebag-montefiore
List price: $8.99
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A great reading of this book
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-28
I like horses and the colour black and Black Beauty is my favourite book and one of the best novels by Anna Sewell. He is a beautiful black animal with a white star on his forehead and one white foot and in the novel of Black Beauty, Black Beauty's white foot was usually always on the back in the left and another second best of Black Beauty's white foot was on the front in the right and that's where I like to see Black Beauty's white foot and it's perfect for the best on the front in the right, and the two hind legs on the left and the right and that's how you like Black Beauty and the best choices.

This book is an abridged version based on the story by Anna Sewell with six chapters and this book is about the young Black Beauty being sold and has no idea of the hardships that he is about to face. You must read in his story in his own words as Black Beauty overcomes danger and cruelty, working at everything from pulling cabs in a smog-filled city to carriages in the country and this is the best one to ever read and the illustrations are so beautiful as they can be and they are sure the best ones and this might be ever the best one to read again and live in for 280 times to join and be part of.

My favorite character in this book is Joe Green, because at the end of Black Beauty, Joe becomes a man and one lucky day, he finds that horse he used to care for and gets excited when he said he had nearly killed him so many nearly ten years ago at Squire Gordon's farm after coming back from the Doctor's.

The characters in this book of Black Beauty where Black Beauty has three white feet of one on the back in the left and the two on the front in the right and the left is just perfect for the one of this one of the my favourite four characters out of this book just to tell you of what clothes they would wear and they are John Manly the coachman in a white shirt, brown vest, brown riding jacket, grey pants and tall brown leather riding boots, then Joe Green the stable boy in a brown cap, white shirt, black vest, blue riding jacket, green riding pants and tall black leather riding boots, and then when Joe Green becomes a man and finds Beauty again, he would be in a plaid cap of green and black, white shirt, brown vest, brown riding pants and tall black leather riding boots, then Reuben Smith in a black top hat, blue scarf, white shirt, brown vest, red jacket, black leather gloves, green riding pants, tall black leather riding boots, and then Jerry Barker in a black derby hat, red scarf, pink shirt, plaid vest of green and black, long brown jacket, black leather gloves, grey pants and tall black leather riding boots and that's very perfect for some of the few favourite characters out of this book of Black Beauty so you'd know what their clothing would have been like.

In this book, I think Sunday afternoons are pairing up horses to pull a carriage and during a journey, a horse tells the stor of her life and at sundown, you drive home. One stormy night John rushes to the stables to saddle Black Beauty and gallop for the doctor to save the Mistress's life and they gallop into lashing rain, while thunder and lightning rage around them, leaves and twigs were dancing in the air, torn from their branches by a savage wind and as they get to the main road, there is a terrible splitting sound crashing trough the darkness and a huge tree falls in their path and Black Beauty gathers all his strenght and jumps and sails over it and when they reach the bridge, Black Beauty can hear the river roaring but, the moment when he steps onto the bridge and stops and John tries to urge Beauty, but he doesn't move and Black Beauty knew something was wrong and John tries to give Beauty a light touch of the whip, but he stays like a statue. Then the moon lit up the bridge and they could see the far end was collapsing into matchsticks, tossing in the raging water and John tells Beauty of how well done he was and they were almost killed to death! John tells Beauty to hurry to the next bridge and the faster they get there. Then Beauty races home with both John and the doctor on his back and was never so tired in his life. That was the best adventure to ever gallop for the doctor, galloping to the next bridge and what a gallop they had to get to the Doctor. At the end of this best new book to live and enjoy with, Joe Green is home with Black Beauty at a pretty house in a small village and it had a nice pasture and a comfortable stable, and the two grown-up sisters are Claire and Elspeth Lyefield and is at a very good home in this chapter and that is a good book I love a lot and it is a GEM, I loved it and it's the greatest novel of all times of the greatest horse story ever told.

Black Beauty (1994) starring Sean Bean DVD is like the novel with the four of the real books on two different Black Beauty books of Illustrated by Robert Doremus and Adapted by June Brigman and Roy Richardson and because those two different books of Black Beauty just for sure go great with the movie as the only two matched up and goes well. The one illustrated by Robert Doremus and adapted by June Brigman and Roy Richardson for sure goes great with the movie because of his white foot on the back in the left.

Black Beauty with actor David Gregory in this animated DVD is like the novel with the book of Black Beauty Illustrated by Scott McKowen would go great with the animated DVD version as it matched up with some of the Black Beauty books of illustrated in black and white by Edwin John Prittie and colour illustrations by Edward F. Cortese and the only one out of another one is Going for the Doctor colour illustration by Percy F. Spence and that for sure goes great with the animated movie because of his white foot on the front in the right and that's how it would be for the animated version.

From now on, my new favorite eight Black Beauty books to live easier with the one of Retold by Mary Sebag-montefiore and illustrated by Alan Marks is the other best only just the seven from now on will only be and are Illustrated in colour by G. P. Micklewright, Illustrated by Neil Reed: Published by Prospero books 2001, Illustrated by Scott McKowen, Adapted by June Brigman and Roy Richardson, Illustrated by John Beer and colour illustrations by Cecil Aldin, Lucy Kemp-Welch and G. P. Micklewright, Illustrated by Libby Turner - published by Brimax in 1985 and Illustrated by Robert Doremus: copyright and published by Whitman in 1951 and that's my best new favourite from now on only just the eight books of Black Beauty to live and read with but, they are now the best real ones I would be in for the ones I like are the best and that's how I'll make my living that way forever and now only just to live with and no more, just my only best now-on favourites to live in somehow and carefully to live in.

Another real four favourites of Black Beauty I like are his white foot on the back in the left, another of his white foot on the front in the right and another one with three white feet of two on the front in the right and the left and the one in the hind left and also his white foot on the front in the left and that's my real four different favourites I like of Black Beauty and where his white foot will be.

Examples of my favourite horse of Black Beauty in different books of his white foot are:

Black Beauty's white foot on the back in the left in the different books of Adapted by June Brigman and Roy Richardson, Illustrated by Neil Reed - Published by Prospero books in 2001, Illustrated by Robert Doremus - copyright and published by Whitman in 1951 and Illustrated by James Needham. So that's where I would like to see Black Beauty's white foot on the back in the left for sure and for real.

Black Beauty's white foot on the front in the right in the different book of Illustrated by Scott McKowen. So that's where I would like to see Black Beauty's white foot on the front in the right.

Black Beauty with three white feet of two on the front in the right and left and the one in the hind left in the ones Illustrated by Ian Andrew (only just for the 2009 year) and Illustrated by G. P. Micklewright. So that's where I would see Black Beauty with three white feet so his you would want it on the front in the right and the left, back in the left and if you see one white foot because of the three, you would say the one on the front in the left and that's the all time best horse ever to have.

Black Beauty's white foot on the front in the left perfect for the two of the best ones of Illustrated by Libby Turner - published by Brimax in 1985 and illustrations by Lucy Kemp-Welch. So that's where I would like to see Black Beauty's white foot perfectly on the front in the left. That's the best one to ever own, sometimes.

Black Beauty's white foot on the back in the right perfect for the two of the best ones of Illustrated by John Beer and colour illustrations by Cecil Aldin which is perfect on the back in the right and part of in with John Beer. That's the best one to keep sometimes, but, never can tell, sometimes.

But the real best three Black Beauty books I'll only want to live with someday and be only the part in the ones of Illustrated by John Beer and colour illustrations by Cecil Aldin, Lucy Kemp-Welch and G. P. Micklewright, Illustrated by Libby Turner - published by Brimax in 1985, Retold by Mary Sebag-montefiore and illustrated by Alan Marks and the ones that follow the movies are illustrated by Robert Doremus - published and copyright in 1951 by Whitman publishing company and adapted by June Brigman and Roy Richardson that follow the only best two that follow the 1994 version of Black Beauty starring Sean Bean and illustrated by Scott McKowen that follows the 1978 animated cartoon version of Black Beauty with David Gregory and that's how it'll work that way.

This book of Black Beauty - adapted by Mary Sebag-montefiore and illustrated by Alan Marks remind me of some of the 2001 National Finals Rodeo in Las Vegas, Nevada with some contestants of Cody Ohl, Blair Burk, Fred Whitfield, Stran Smith, Herbert Theriot, Joe Beaver, Brad Goodrich and Jesse Bail who are the perfect rodeo contestants and then this Black Beauty book reminds me of a book on Daniel's Duck (I Can Read Book 3) (Library Binding) by Clyde Robert Bulla and pictures by Joan Sandin, DVD videos on Barnyard with the voices of Kevin James and Danny Glover (which reminds you of some of Disney's The Lion King) all for some of the NFR years for 2008 and that's what this means to me, a lot in this world.

I loved, liked and enjoyed this book and that is a gem and it is the great and best book of love, I loved it and it's the greatest novel of all times of the greatest horse story ever told. I loved it:)

Beauty
Black Beauty According to Spike Milligan (According To...)
Published in Paperback by Virgin Books (2008-06-30)
Author: Spike Milligan
List price: $11.83
New price: $7.06
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Average review score:

Ever wondered what a horse thought? Look no further then!
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 1998-04-01
Spike Milligan, professional goon and all round funny man has done it again. Black Beauty according to Spike Milligan is undoubtedly the most hilarious book from beginning to end. What makes this version of Black Beauty different from the others? Its told from the horses point of view. Everything that makes Black Beauty, Black Beauty is thrown right out the window.
You'll soon learn that poor Beauty had a really trying life, occasionally broken by the odd whiskey and oats or the odd kicking, biting and thorough trampling of people he didn't like or really liked. The horse is seriously mixed up yet still good natured. The male readers may wince at certain areas.

On the whole you'll be chuckling, sniggering and rolling around wracked with fits of laughter as Spike Milligan presents Beauty's life as Beauty saw it.

Beauty
Black Beauty Finds a Home (Anna Sewell's the Adventures of Black Beauty, 4)
Published in School & Library Binding by Troll Communications (1983-05)
Authors: I. M. Richardson and Anna Sewell
List price: $10.79
Used price: $0.41

Average review score:

I have now lived in this happy place a whole year
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-16
I love this book of "The Adventures of Black Beauty: Black Beauty finds a home" and it's about when Black Beauty relates his experiences with a cruel owner followed by his sale to three ladies and his subsequent reunion with his stable boy Joe Green of ten years earlier from Squire Gordon's stables.

This is a great book and all of my favorites.

On page 29, Joe Green's hands are touching the horse's face because he realizes that he once had cared for a horse who had a white star on the forehead and one white foot. Then he knows it's Black Beauty.

I have a little something to say a little something to match that book.

My Last Home

Two sisters who owned the nearby manor house
came to see me. They were the Miss Bloomfields,
and they wanted a horse. They were not sure about me,
especially when they saw the scars on my knees, but they
decided to give me a trial.
The next morning, the second sister spoke and
told Mr. Thoroughgood to let their coachman to have a look
at him first. Then Mr. Thoroughgood said, "Of course, Willie,
you must now run to the stables and fetch the coachman because
there's a good lad." Willie ran off, and returned a few minutes
later with a handsome young man. So when the coachman saw
that horse he carefully looked me over. "Why I one knew a horse
with those white markings. Can it be! I know this horse! He is really Black Beauty!" The other looked surprised. "Black Beauty?" Mr. Thoroughgood asked. Then he threw his right arm around my neck because he was so happy to see me again and my new groom was Joe Green, John Manly's young assistant!
Then Joe told the Miss Bloomfield's all about me. As they knew
Mrs. Gordon, they were delighted and promised that I would never,
ever be sold again.
So my troubles are all over, and I am at home.
Often, before I am quite awake, I fancy and dream I am still in Squire Gordon's orchard at Birtwick, standing with my old friends under the apple trees.

"You're Black Beauty! I almost killed you when you were at Squire Gordon's" said Joe Green, my new groom and...

I have a little something to go with this as well and it would go:

They were delighted to find me a home with three country ladies. Their coachman was even more delighted when he spotted that little sprig of white hairs on my back and recognised me as Black Beauty. The coachman was Joe Green. I wouldn't have recognised little Joe. He was a grown man and had become the best and kindest of coachmen. The work here is pleasant and young Willie and my old friend Joe had mad the ladies promise I'll never be sold. My troubles seem over and I feel really at home -- as much at home as in those far gone days when I stood talking to my friends beneath the apple trees at Birtwick Park.

This is one of the greatest and bestest books ever and that book puts me in mind of the 1986 National Finals Rodeo in Las Vegas, Nevada when Chris Lybbert was the 1986 world champion calf roper.

Well, I loved and enjoyed this book.

I really liked Joe Green because he is the best stableboy ever.

I loved it, enjoyed and liked it!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Beauty
Black Beauty My First Classics
Published in Paperback by HarperFestival (2006-01-01)
Author: Anna Sewell
List price: $4.99
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Average review score:

A horse never knows what his next adventure will be. . . .
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-15
I love this book Black Beauty and it's the great and the best book ever of and about a life story of a beautiful black horse with a white star and a white foot and I like horses and the color book and this is the best beautiful book adapted by Laura F. Marsh that contains 34 chapters and that's the best ever to read and that is an abridged version.

In this book....

When Black Beauty is a young colt, he is surrounded by gentle care and comfort. As he is sold to a series of owners, including a squire, an earl, and a cab driver, he discovers that while some people are kind, others are equally as cruel. This is a horse's story of strength and spirit, as shown through his own eyes.

In this book adapted by Laura F. Marsh, I would say and know that Black Beauty's white foot is on the back in the left and that's where it usually is in the book.

The characters in this book of Black Beauty where Black Beauty's white foot is on the back in the left of the one of for this one of the few seven charcters out of this book just to tell you of what clothes they would wear and they are John Manly the coachman in a plaid green cap, white shirt, plaid vest of green and black, green riding jacket with yellow lining, brown riding pants and tall black leather riding boots, except in A Stormy Day, when John Manly would be in a different outfit when he would be in a black derby hat, white shirt, red tie, brown vest, black blazer, grey pants and tall black leather riding boots, then James Howard the stableboy in a plaid green cap, yellow shirt with blue stripes, plaid vest of green and black, light green scarf, brown riding pants and tall black leather riding boots, then Joe Green the stableboy after James leaves in a brown cap, white shirt, brown vest, grey riding jacket, beige riding pants and tall black leather riding boots, then Reuben Smith in black top hat, white shirt, black vest, blue riding jacket, black leather gloves, grey pants and tall black leather riding boots with brown tops, Alfred Smirk in a brown cap, light blue shirt, red tie, black vest, brown pants and short black leather boots, then Jerry Barker in a black derby hat, white shirt, black tie, black vest, black blazer, black pants, black shoes and in the winter Jerry is in a black derby hat, red scarf, white shirt, black vest, black blazer, long brown jacket, black leather gloves, black pants and black shoes and then Nicholas Skinner in a black top hat, black bowtie, white shirt, green vest, blue jacket, grey pants and short black leather boots and then in My Last Home when Joe Green becomes a man, Joe would be in a green cap, blue necktie, pink shirt, brown vest, blue blazer, beige riding pants and tall black leather riding boots and when Joe is in the low park cab with Miss Ellen, Joe is in a different outfit of a green cap, white shirt, black tie, black vest, white shirt, brown riding jacket, grey pants, and short black leather boots and that's very perfect for some of the few favorite characters out of this book of Black Beauty so you'd know what their clothing would have been like.

This book of Black Beauty adapted by Laura F. Marsh goes very great and well with the Black Beauty (1994) DVD video starring Sean Bean and directed by Caroline Thompson and that book would follow the movie very great because the real Black Beauty you ought to own is his white foot on the back in the left and that's how this book adapted by Laura F. Marsh matches the movie by Sean Bean.

Two couples of chapters for Black Beauty are an example of The Fire and My Last Home.

The Fire

Later on that evening, another traveler's horse was brought in and cleaned by one of the hostlers and a man with a pipe in his mouth was talking to one of the hostlers.
"Towler," said the hostler, "you'll not smoke your pipe in the stables so just, first lay down your pipe and run up the ladder to the loft and drop some hay down here."
"All right," the man Towler said. He went up to the loft and put down the hay and I paid him no heed. James came into look at us one more time, and then the door was locked for the night and I went to sleep.
I awoke later in the night chocking, the air was all hot and thick.
I could hear Ginger coughing and a strange crackling noise that was terrifying me.
All the other horses were all awake, whinnying, pulling at their halters and stamping their feet in fear.
At last I could hear footsteps outside, and a hostler appeared with a lantern and tried to pull one of the horses out, but he was crazed with fear and wouldn't move.
No doubt we were very foolish, and the danger all around us and how could we trust someone?
A red light flickered on the wall, then someone outside shouted "fire! fire!" Then the old hostler who had cared for me that night came in quietly and led one horse out.
The flamed roared above us now, and the noise was very, very terrible. After a moment, the next thing I knew James was at my side when I heard his voice, quiet and cherry as always, whispering, "Come, my beauties, it is time for us to be off. Come along." I stood nearest the door, so he came to me first, patting me as he came in.
"Come, Beauty! It is time for us to be off. Come along." He put my bridle on in no time; then he took off the scarf from his neck and tied it over my eyes to calm me, and after some coaxing, he led me out. Safely when we were out of the burning stable into the yard, he slipped the scarf off my eyes and shouted, "Here, somebody! Take this horse while I go back for the other!"
A tall, broad man came and took me, while James raced back into the stable. I let out a shrill whinny as I watched him go. Ginger had told me afterwards that my whinny was the best thing I would have done for if she never heard me outside, she wouldn't have had the courage to come out.
There was a lot of confusion in the yard! There was a mess of carriages and horses and people shouting. Above all the noise I heard a loud, clear voice which I knew was Squire Gordon's.
"James Howard! James Howard! Are you in there?" I had whinnied at the sound of my master's voice, but there was no other answer.
Then suddenly, I heard a crash of something falling in the stable. The next moment I saw James appearing through the smoke, leading Ginger with him and I gave a loud, joyful neigh. Ginger coughed violently and he was not able to speak, but she looked all right.
"My brave lad! You hurt!" said Squire Gordon. "I am well, Squire," James said after he was able to speak. Then gazing at James, the big man who held me said, "Aye, he's a brave lad an no mistake about it."
"Let us get out of the way then, for I hear the fire engine coming!" There was a dreadful crash as the roof collapsed on the burning stable, and then we were away in the fresh night air.
The next morning we heard James and the hostler talking and James had looked very pleased that our master was proud of him.
The next day James told of the man who was seen entering the stable with a pipe, and exiting without it. It was thought that this was how the fire had started. I remembered our John Manly's rule never to allow pipes in the stables and thought it ought to be the rule everywhere.
James said that the roof and floor of the burning stable had fallen in and that only the walls were standing. There was two horses underneath the remains that could not be lead out that night.

If you were Joe Green with a moustache in My Last Home and saw Black Beauty again, you would say, "You have a scar on your back
like Black Beauty." Then you would be surprised and say "Beauty, is that really you? Don't you know me? I'm little Joe Green from Squire Gordon's stables. I can see you've had some hard times, Beauty and I must think so and I wonder who the nasty one was that scarred your knees, my old Beauty. You must have been treated horribly somewhere, but I'll make sure that you only have good times now. Now, I'm here, Black Beauty, I'm here. I swear I won't ever let you out of my sight again. Oh, Beauty ... You're safe now. I only wish John Manly would be here to see you, too, Black Beauty! I promise I'll take good care of you so your troubles are over."

That's a great line to say if you were Joe Green when you found Black Beauty again, the horse you raised and loved and it's white star on the forehead and his white foot on the back in the left.

My other favorite Black Beauty books with the one Adapted by Laura F. Marsh is the other nine are Illustrated by Neil Reed: Published by Prospero books in 2001, Illustrated by Scott McKowen, Illustrated by Ian Andrew, Adapted by June Brigman and Roy Richardson, Retold by Lisa Church and Illustrated by Lucy Corvino, Color Illustrations by Edward F. Cortese and Illustrated in black and white by Edwin John Prittie, Illustrated by Fritz Eichenberg: Illustrated Junior Library the one published in 1995, Illustrated by William Geldart and Illustrated by G. P. Micklewright and that's my ten favorite books of Black Beauty to live with but, the real ones I would be in for the ones I like are Illustrated by Neil Reid published in 2001 by Prospero books, Illustrated by Scott McKowen (which is the easiest one to live with, because of the five black and white illustrations which are great and good and much easier), Illustrated by Ian Andrew, Adapted by June Brigman and Roy Richardson, Retold by Lisa Church and Illustrated by Lucy Corvino, and Illustrated by William Geldart and that's the best six books to be in of Black Beauty, even the other four are my favorites as well too.

Another two favorites of Black Beauty I like are his white foot on the front in the right and three white feet of one on the front in the right and the two in the hind right and left and that's three different favorites I like of Black Beauty and where his white foot will be.

Examples of my favorite horse of Black Beauty in different ten books of his white foot are:

Black Beauty's white foot on the back in the left in the five different books of Adapted by Laura F. Marsh, Illustrated by Neil Reed: Published by Prospero books in 2001, Illustrated by Ian Andrew, Adapted by June Brigman and Roy Richardson, Retold by Lisa Church and Illustrated by Lucy Corvino. So that's where I would like to see Black Beauty's white foot on the back in the left.

Black Beauty's white foot on the front in the right in the different books of Illustrated by Scott McKowen, Color Illustrations by Edward F. Cortese and Illustrated in black and white by Edwin John Prittie, Illustrated by Fritz Eichenberg, and Illustrated by G. P. Micklewright. So that's where I would like to see Black Beauty's white foot on the front in the right.

Black Beauty with three white feet of one on the front in the right and the two in the hind right and left in the specail book Illustrated by William Geldart. So that's where I would see Black Beauty with three white feet so his you would want it on the front in the right, back in the right and the back in the left and if you see one white foot because of the three, you would say the one on the back in the right.

Black Beauty is my favorite horse and he would be a great horse for roping and bulldogging as if he could be a perfect rodeo horse.

This book of Black Beauty adapted by Laura F. Marsh, I know his white foot will be on the back in the left and that's where I think it is.

This Black Beauty book adapted by Laura F. Marsh reminds me of a book of Horses (Cube Books) (Hardcover) by author Valeria Manferto De Fabianis, DVD's of Rodeo Bloopers 2, Rodeo Bloopers, Yours, Mine & Ours starring Dennis Quaid, Disney's Where the Red Fern Grows starring Joseph Ashton, The Last Cowboy (2003) starring Lance Henriksen and Bonanza (out of others like lunchboxes from 1965 or 1968), some scenes of Lonesome Dove with Robert Duvall and Tommy Lee Jones. This Black Beauty book adapted by Laura F. Marsh for sure reminds me of that Black Beauty DVD starring Sean Bean because this book would go great with the movie and another Black Beauty of Illustrated by Victor Ambrus and adapted by Caryn Jenner also goes great with the Sean Bean DVD video of Black Beauty and that's the best two for the Black Beauty DVD.
Another Black Beauty DVD to have is the animated one with David Gregory and that's the best two Black Beauty DVD movies to watch of the Sean Bean (1994) and directed by Caroline Thompson and the animated one with David Gregory and that's the best two.

Well, I gotta say, that was the best book I ever read which showed me how to treat horses with respect and kindness.

This book should be perfect and great for the 2008 Wrangler National Finals Rodeo (NFR) in Las Vegas, Nevada to show how cowboys in the NFR should treat their horses with respect to train roping horses how to rope and wrestle calves or steers.

I loved, liked and enjoyed this book.

It is a GEM, I loved it and it's the greatest novel of all times of the greatest horse story ever told.

Beauty
Black Beauty
Published in Hardcover by Modern Pub (2004-07-30)
Author:
List price: $3.99
New price: $0.01
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $10.00

Average review score:

A Very Good Book!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-18
It's a great story about a horse named Black Beauty. A heart-warming story with a happy ending.

Beauty
Black Beauty's Early Days in the Meadow (Classic Picture Books)
Published in Hardcover by Sleeping Bear Press (2006-09-28)
Author: Anna Sewell
List price: $15.95
New price: $7.95
Used price: $7.16

Average review score:

A wonderful introduction to a great humanitarian book for young people
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-04
Black Beauty's Early Days in the Meadow transforms the beginning of Anna Sewell's classic of children's literature into a gorgeous picturebook. Illustrated in soft colors by Jane Monroe Donovan, who studied horses at length to exquisitely capture their movements, the expansive artwork captures the essence of spring from the fresh grass of the meadow to the pastel hues of the sky. A wonderful introduction to a great humanitarian book for young people, and a superb book to read aloud at storytime or bedtime. The final lesson from Black Beauty's mother has an important lesson for youngsters of all species: "'I hope you grow up gentle and good, and never learn bad ways; do your work with a good will, lift your feet up well when you trot, and never bite or kick even in play.' I have never forgotten my mother's advice; I knew she was a wise old horse, and our master thought a great deal of her."

Beauty
Black Beauty's Family/08724
Published in Hardcover by Exetera (1988-11)
Author: Josephine Pullein-Thompson
List price: $7.98
Used price: $2.44

Average review score:

Nice blend of equine and historical facts
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-29
This volume is actually a combination of two books each containing three stories of about a hundred pages: Black Beauty's Clan, and Black Beauty's Family. Clan covers Black Ebony, who starts out as a hunter; Black Princess, who spent time as an officer's charger in the Great War (WWI); and Black Velvet who was a showjumper at a time when riding styles were changing. In Family, Nightshade goes from racehorse to highwayman's mount; Black Romany meets Queen Victoria and Prince Albert; and Blossom sufferers from the British disdain for piebald horses. As in Sewell's original Black Beauty, each horse moves though a variety of owners, good and bad, before reaching their happy ending, although friends along the way often fail to get their own (remember Ginger) The period details are marvelous, both the great - as where Ebony becomes a pit pony and later pulls bathing machines - and small - the fashion for children to roll hoops (a threat to horses if they roll underfoot) and the flagman leading the automobile, which later that year would be permitted to travel at FOURTEEN miles an hour instead of the then-legal FOUR, and no flagman would be required to warn horsemen of the car's approach. For children's books, I think these are very well written, although they do contain, as the original did, both death and violence (beating of horses and such), they also contain numerous examples of patience and love.


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