How many miles to Babylon?
Three score miles and ten.
Can I get there by candlelight?
Yes, and back again.
If your heels are nimble and light,
You can get there by candlelight.
-- Mother Goose
I think I was about 7 or 8 when I first got this book. I know of got it second hand, but I'm not 100% sure where it came from or who gave it to me. All I know for certain is that I instantly fell in love with it. You know those books that just grab you completely, and you know it's special before you've even started it? There's a magical quality to them and they insist you have them? This was one of those.
I suppose part of it is the cover - how can a horse crazy kid resist that picture (It's by Lydia Rosier by the way) or the intriguing title that seemed much more unusual than your typical horse riding story title. And this book is rather unusual - yes it has a girl (Gail) and she has a pony, Candy. It starts like many pony stories, with a ride in the woods*. Gail takes Candy or Candlelight which is her full name, through an old gate and through the woods, where they emerge on the lawn of an enormous house, with a girl called Hilary, wearing an old-fashioned dress, accompanied by her little white dog Nanette.
The house (estate?) is called Babylon, and somehow riding Candy through that gate takes Gail about 100 years back in time. She spends her summer afternoons in the past with Hilary, learning how to ride side saddle and using Hilary's pony cart. They become firm friends and it's enchanting to read.
It's a beautiful story with an ominous undertone that I found completely captivating when I first read it. I felt like I was there with Gail and Hilary, I could smell the honeysuckle and taste the lemonade and teacakes. It was a completely absorbing reading experience and I've read it over and over again.
I enjoyed it just as much on this reading and expect I'll be returning to it again many more times. It's a short book, you can easily read it in one or two sittings and just get lost in it for a little while.
Two things to note - it is a children's story, and while an adult could certainly enjoy it, if books aimed at younger readers aren't for you, you probably aren't compatible with this.
Also, if you buy this off Book Depository (and possibly other websites, though I haven't checked) they give away the dramatic ending of the book, though slightly inaccurately, since the actual story is more open ended than their description. This might not be an issue for many, but if you don't like spoilers, stick the Goodreads description and just avoid the description if Book Depository is somewhere you're considering purchasing from (they do have it at a great price)!
*More accurately, it starts with the opening of an old a trunk. The ride begins in chapter two.