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Off Like the Wind!
The First Ride of the Pony Express



By Michael Spradlin, Paintings by Layne Johnson
Walker Books for Young Readers
© Copyright 2010

The 2010 Western Heritage Award Winner sponsored by The National Cowboy Hall Of Fame and Museum

Saddle up and take a wild ride through the untamed West with the brave first riders of the Pony Express! In 1860, the first rider set out on a trail from Missouri to California. With him, he carried a special delivery—mail. Over the next eleven days, he and many other men would face harsh weather, dangerous animals like buffalo and wolves, and more, but nothing could weaken their determination and courage. Michael P. Spradlin and Layne Johnson bring to life in stunning historic detail an adventurous journey that celebrates America’s can-do attitude and pioneering spirit.

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Reviews

 

School Library Journal
"This colorful and accessible picture book recounts the day-to-day adventures of Pony Express riders on the first transcontinental mail delivery system, from St. Joseph, MO, to Sacramento, CA. The book opens with a map of the overland route, a time line of major events in the Express's short-lived history (1860-1861), and a quote from Mark Twain's Roughing It. On the unprecedented journey, which took roughly 11 days, riders faced extremes in weather, buffalo stampedes, wolves, and encounters with Native tribes. The straightforward text in combination with the larger-than-life panoramic oil spreads capture the romance, excitement, and danger that riders experienced along the trail. An author's note explains that truth and legend are often intertwined when researching the Pony Express due to the destruction of records upon the cessation of service. Balancing the right amount of information with lively narrative, this book could easily be used in a history unit or as a general interest title."    

 

Booklist

“Basing his book, as much as possible, on scanty historical records (the author suggests that files may have been deliberately destroyed after the short-lived company's collapse to prevent lawsuits), Spradlin recreates the Pony Express' first rides east from Sacramento and west from St. Joseph, Missouri-naming riders and horses when he can, and providing a composite of various Express riders' adventures. Johnson heightens the drama with evocative full-bleed oils depicting riders galloping away from cheering crowds and snarling wolves, ducking an arrow, trudging through a snowstorm, and, in a particularly exciting scene, struggling not to go down amid stampeding buffalo. For collections that don't already contain Gare Thompson's Riding with the Mail (2007) or one of the plethora of similar titles, this makes a good introduction for budding fans of the Old West, and provides a stimulating prelude to more detailed histories, such as Tim McNeese's The Pony Express: Bringing Mail to the American West (2009). An afterword, lists for further reading, a map, and a time line round out the book.”    

 

Kirkus

"In this rousing, as-historically-accurate-as-possible recreation of the Pony Express's first ride, Spradlin introduces readers to the crazy-wild brainchild of three businessmen to expedite mail over the near-2,000 miles from St. Joseph, Mo., to Sacramento, Calif. Accompanied by Johnson's artwork, which has the energy of rolling thunder and the colors of a sunset, and with an engaging sense of drama and urgency, the author follows the riders over the varied landscapes they covered, through the heavy weather they encountered and past the occasional hostile reception they received from Native Americans (though his bell-clear author's note clarifies that hostilities were rare). When he can introduce factual material-the names of riders, the number and character of station stops, the price of $5 for ½ ounce-he does so with a light hand to keep the pedagogy at a distance. For all its iconic status, the Pony Express lasted for only a year and a half before the transcontinental telegraph drew a sleeve across its windpipe, but it was an inventive enterprise full of bodacious frontier spirit, which this book plays to the hilt."

 

 

 

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All images on this page are copyrighted by Layne Johnson
and may not be copied or reproduced in any form without written permission.

 

 

 

 

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