

Enid Michael has written just this one children’s book, The Runaway National. After a slightly unbelievable start, when the teenage Kerry manages to outwit a particularly nasty gang of villains (and I admit my heart was in my mouth when Kerry was taken off to stay with them: the book was written in more innocent times, thankfully), the book settles down and turns into a heartwarming tale of a horse in whom nobody has believed apart from Kerry.
Finding the book: very easy to find, and usually cheap.
Sources and links:
The British Library catalogue
Enid Michael
The Runaway National
Corgi, London, pb, 1981, 153 pp.
Kerry’s grandfather promised the filly he bred, Steamboat, would one day win the
Grand National, but
grandfather died, the horses were sold, and Kerry sent to live
with her uncle. She was absolutely determined
to track Steamboat down, and have her
trained to win the National. Although she does track the filly down,
she is a ringer
for another, far less talented horse, and even though Kerry manages to get the filly
from them,
they do not give up their nefarious intentions.
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