 One of the Academy Award nominees for Best Picture is the Stephen Spielberg film, War Horse.  While War Horse might be considered a “dark horse” nomination, after seeing the movie a few weeks ago I can understand its being elevated to Best Picture status.  Some people have called War Horse a tearjerker.  I call it a “heart-tugger.”   This story of a beautiful thoroughbred which was sold into the British Cavalry during World War I and the English boy who loved him is a story with which audiences empathize and engage.
One of the Academy Award nominees for Best Picture is the Stephen Spielberg film, War Horse.  While War Horse might be considered a “dark horse” nomination, after seeing the movie a few weeks ago I can understand its being elevated to Best Picture status.  Some people have called War Horse a tearjerker.  I call it a “heart-tugger.”   This story of a beautiful thoroughbred which was sold into the British Cavalry during World War I and the English boy who loved him is a story with which audiences empathize and engage. The movie works on many different levels.  The most obvious is the depiction of love and loyalty between a boy and his horse.  Secondly, it is a powerful message about peace.  War Horse also demonstrates how technological developments, which occurred quickly during the four years of war, changed the role of the cavalry, and more broadly, how wars are fought.  
War Horse is based on the children’s novel, War Horse, by  Michael Morpurgo, Children’s Laureate of Britain from 2003 to 2005.  Morpurgo is well-known in this country for The Wreck of the Zanzibar United States 
War Horse has evolved through several different incarnations.  The book first was adapted into a stage play using life size puppets for the horses and with most of the war scenes projected through a gauze curtain, in combination with a cast of live actors.  It was staged in London then New York 
(War Horse by Michael Morpurgo; Scholastic, 2007; First published in Great Britain in 1982)
(Singing for Mrs. Pettigrew by Michael Morpurgo, illustrated by Peter Bailey; Candlewick, 2009)  
 
 
 
 If you know any young graphic novel readers, you will want to look for a new series called The Flying Beaver Brothers.  The first and second books in the series were released on January 10, 2012.  Ace and Bub live on Beaver Island.  In the first adventure The Evil Penguin Plan, the brothers are figuring out how to win the Beaver Island Surfing Competition when they are interrupted by a group of penguins with impressive technical skills.  The penguins have built a machine designed to freeze the island so they can construct a polar resort.  In The Fishy Business, Ace and Bub investigate the questionable business practices of the Fish Stix Environmental Manufacturing Company.  The words and pictures deliver plenty of humor and action, and the clever story lines will please both children and adults--Lucinda Whitehurst.  (Written and illustrated by Maxwell Eaton III; Random House Children's Books, 2012)
If you know any young graphic novel readers, you will want to look for a new series called The Flying Beaver Brothers.  The first and second books in the series were released on January 10, 2012.  Ace and Bub live on Beaver Island.  In the first adventure The Evil Penguin Plan, the brothers are figuring out how to win the Beaver Island Surfing Competition when they are interrupted by a group of penguins with impressive technical skills.  The penguins have built a machine designed to freeze the island so they can construct a polar resort.  In The Fishy Business, Ace and Bub investigate the questionable business practices of the Fish Stix Environmental Manufacturing Company.  The words and pictures deliver plenty of humor and action, and the clever story lines will please both children and adults--Lucinda Whitehurst.  (Written and illustrated by Maxwell Eaton III; Random House Children's Books, 2012)