LoveReading4Kids Says
Set on a ranch high up in the Rocky Mountains, the Mustang Mountain
series tells the story of Becky who is sent up there from her city-home
one holiday. She’s furious with her parents for dumping her but she
soon finds that life on Mustang Mountain is anything but dull, and with
new friends and horses galore she’s in her element.
There are so many pony-mad series around but some of them are
distinctly dubious, with an uninspiring quality of writing as well as a
notable lack of storyline. Then two brand new series emerge at once so
we thought we should definitely tell you about them both. Thankfully,
they are for different age groups, so for all those pony mad kids start
them at 6 or 7 on Pippa Funnell’s Tilly’s Pony Tails and then progress them at 8 or 9+ on to the Mustang Mountain series.
LoveReading4Kids
Find This Book In
Mustang Mountain: Rodeo Horse Synopsis
As Alison basks in her newly discovered rodeo talents, Becky struggles to train the wild horse Shadow, and find out more about the mysterious boy, Rob. Poor Meg is stuck in New York, longing to join her friends. When an accident occurs, the girls must change their plans to find out what happened. Was it really an accident?
About This Edition
ISBN: |
9781405243100 |
Publication date: |
7th September 2009 |
Author: |
Sharon Siamon |
Publisher: |
Egmont Childrens Books |
Format: |
Paperback |
Suitable For: |
|
About Sharon Siamon
Where do you live, and where did you grow up?
I live in horse country, in a house in the woods near Ottawa, Canada's capital city. I grew up near Toronto, in an area of fields and farms where there were also lots of horses.
What books did you like as a child?
So many! Some of my favorites were Alice in Wonderland, My Friend Flicka, Enid Blyton's Famous Five books, Anne of Green Gables, the Narnia series. I always had my nose in a book, and read at night with a flashlight after lights out.
Who are your favorite authors?
Right at the moment: Alexander McCall Smith, Patrick O'Brien, J.K. Rowling, Jane Smiley and Annie Proulx. I still read lots of children's books and every book I can find about wild horses.
When and why did you decide to become a writer? Did you write stories when you were a child?
My father was a writer so I was surrounded by books and manuscripts as a child. I wrote and illustrated my own stories from a young age. Before I knew how to read or write, I made up stories for my brother, Chris, and pretended to read them from a book which was often upside down! But when people asked me if I was going to be a writer like my dad, I always said "No!" It wasn't until I was in my thirties that it finally dawned on me I'd been a writer all along and might even make a living at it.
hat do you do in your spare time?
I read, explore the country around my new home, ride horses whenever I can.
Do you ride? How old were you when you started riding, and do you ride now?
I fell in love with horses at a very early age. My brother and I used to ride the work horses on the farm across the road. We'd lure them to the fence with apples and then climb the fence to clamber on their backs. Those were short rides! I dreamed and schemed and plotted and planned to get a horse of my own my entire childhood, but it never happened. I never got to be a very good rider, but retained my love for and interest in horses (especially wild horses!). When I started writing, they galloped into my books and back into my life.
These days I ride at a lovely stable called Meadowbrook Farms and go trail riding at a place called The Eastern Cowboy. My husband and I go on horse treks in the Rockies and Arizona and this year are going riding (we hope) in Scotland.
Do you have a favorite food?
Yes! My favourites are chocolate and artichokes.
What else would you like your readers to know about you?
When I was 20 I traveled to Africa, took a barge loaded with onions up the Nile River (very smelly by the end of the trip), taught school in Uganda, and climbed Mount Kilimanjaro. I still have dreams about that mountain! I'm sad that the snow on the top is melting. I have always wanted to return to East Africa and maybe someday I will.
More About Sharon Siamon