City of Horses is a middle-grade novel about a girl who has recently moved into a new part of town. There she meets new friends and learns to ride. It’s sort of a horsey novel, but it also focuses on some social issues that she faces. It’s a bit like Jacqueline Wilson but more modern, mixed up with an old-timey horse book. I have to say, whereas I love both of those things, and I did enjoy the mash-up, it didn’t quite work. I feel like the book would have been stronger if it was one or the other. I enjoyed the Jacqueline Wilson style social parts more than the horse parts.
The main character is a 13-year-old girl called Misty who lives with her dad. Her mum died a couple of years before the story starts, and she doesn’t have any siblings. The book features Misty’s two best friends, Ruby and Jasmine. Ruby was my favourite character and I also really liked Jasmine. The problem was that I liked Misty’s friends more than Misty. Misty starts out the book living in what I assume is a nicer area, and they end up having to move to a rougher area when Misty’s dad loses his job. Misty is embarrassed and hides what’s been going on from her friends. Once the story moves to Misty’s new home in Redbridge, we meet Dylan and the horses, and Misty’s world is split in two as she tries to adjust to her new home and hide everything from her richer friends.
The book was really enjoyable and I kept wanting to read it or read more of it. This is a big deal for me lately! It reads like a middle grade, but the characters are 13 and in Year 9 at school, so it was a bit jarring at times. I also got frustrated when I realised it was a save-the-horses type of horse story in part, because I’ve read that trope a few times before. I also didn’t really get the title, City of Horses sounds like it would be set in a city, or have some fantasy element to it. It was mostly set on a working-class housing estate and there was no fantasy element to it at all. It was still good though.
All in all, I had a few problems with City of Horses, but I did really enjoy it and I will keep an eye out for the author.
3.75 out of 5 stars. (It’s nearly a 4.)