This is one of the greatest books EVER. If you happen to be a young girl who dreams of a pony of your own, as I was when I first read it. (I believe I have read it three times at least, and I am now looking for my own copy.) This is the story of Jean, who lives in a suburb where all the houses look exactly alike, and most of the families do too. But Jean's family is different: her brother is a certified genius, her father has passed away, and it is her mother who commutes to the city every day with her friends' dads. And when Jean talks about getting a pony, she means it. She enters a pony naming contest, and wins! And (this is where it gets really good) one day a truck pulls up to her house, and they unload a beautiful brown and white pony. And this is why it's every girl's fantasy: they don't ask if she has a place to keep it, they just leave it. And so Jean keeps Hopscotch in her front yard, in a pen made out of clothesline. She buys a used bridle, and rides her pony bareback around the neighborhood. Her mother has no problem with this! I wanted to be Jean soooo badly! But it is hard to keep a pony in your front yard, and in the end Jean has to make other arrangements, which work out very satisfactorially indeed!
April 2020: Read this aloud to the kids, after getting my own copy at Powells' in Portland. They loved it too!