Most Helpful Customer Reviews
14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
A new beginning, December 23, 1999
I had written Walter Farley before this book was released. He wrote me back and told me he was working on it. (I still have the letter.) This story was a difficult one for Mr. Farley to write, as the character of Pam was modelled after his own daughter Pam who was killed in a car crash in Europe in the late 1960's. It is a harsh awakening for Alec, who loses his love; the one bright spot in his darkening world. Business pressures, the physical strain on his body, and the need to take a break from horse racing were all taking their toll on Alec. With the death of Pam, Alec's world collapsed, and he headed west. Just when things seemed like they couldn't get worse, a meteor strikes the earth. What should have been a calamatous event becomes a new beginning for Alec,Henry,the Black, and Hopeful Farm. I found the book interesting, although not as good as THE BLACK STALLION AND THE GIRL, the one Black Stallion book that has overshadowed all others,in my opinion.
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Farley took a chance, July 11, 2000
Farley took a chance with this book and, unlike others, it rocked my world. It took me a couple tries to finally understand what happened at the end of the book, and that is the only detraction I have! Alec's pain is raw and movingly depicted in this book. I didn't think Walter Farley had that kind of cathartic writing ability at all, but he really pulled it off. The reader can follow poor Alec through the pain of loss and then come to terms with it as he does. Farley did it! This book is a must read if you want to end the series right. Read it.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Culminating Triumph of the Series!, June 23, 2005
This last in the famous series about a young boy and his beloved racehorse is deeper and much more "adult-like" in nature than the books that preceeded it. It shows Alex (the young boy from the begining of the series) as an adult faced with trememdous issues and obstacles. I remember when I first read this book as a teenager I cried at the beginning and I cried again at the end, but for totally different and contrasting reasons. Even though I loved the beginning books, which are much more innocent and happy in their nature, I ended up loving this one the best because not only did it bring about a heart warming conclusion to a classic series, but the writing, in and of its own in this particular book, is expert.
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