Byars, Betsy

About the author

Betsy Byars (1928–2020) was born in 1928, “the same year as bubble gum and Mickey Mouse…, a very good year for all three of us.” She lived in an aircraft hangar with her husband. They were both pilots, and the bottom of the house was a hangar so they could taxi out in their planes. The fact the house was on an airstrip in South Carolina must have helped too.

Byars wrote over 60 children’s books. She was a Newbery Medal winner (1971: The Summer of the Swans) and amongst many other awards, also won the American Book Award in 1981 with The Night Swimmers. Although many of her books featured animals, just three are horse books.

When she was small, she saw an animated film with white winged horses – the most beautiful thing she saw as a child, she thought, and a strong influence on The Winged Horse of Casa Mia. The book was set in Texas, as she experienced its wildness at first hand after having to drive out and haul her husband’s glider when he didn’t make it back to the airport. It was “a place where a boy and a winged colt could have some adventures without any publicity at all.”

Betsy Byar’s other horse books are for younger readers, and feature Little Horse, who really is little: just six inches high. “When you’re only about six inches tall, there’s danger everywhere – not just from fast currents and waterfalls, but from hawks and dogs and, even, humans.”

Finding the books
Winged Colt is very easy to find as a paperback, and is usually very cheap. As a hardback it’s perfectly findable too, and is usually reasonably priced. Both the Little Horse books are still in print, though only, as far as I can see, in hardback.

Links and sources
Betsy Byar’s website
Betsy Byar’s entry on Wikipedia
An article on Betsy Byars on Carol Hurst’s children’s literature site


Bibliography (horse books only)


The Winged Colt of Casa Mia

Viking Press, Inc, 1973The Bodley Head, London, 1974
Puffin Books, 1979, cover Chris Molan, illus Krystyna Turska
As part of Animal Stories, Red Fox, 1998

Uncle Coot declares there is no such thing as a winged horse, and there never will be either, but that is just what has been born on his neighbour’s property. Uncle Coot’s nephew, Charles, is far better than his uncle at coping with the reality of the colt, Alado, and he becomes the centre of Charles’ life.

Little Horse

Henry Holt & Company, 2002, illus David MacPhail

The blurb:

“Little Horse falls into a stream and is swept away from the Valley of Little Horses. He finds danger, adventure and a new life.”

Little Horse on his Own

Henry Holt & Company, 2004, illus David MacPhail

The blurb:

“Little Horse faces lightning, fire and dangerous animals on his way back to the valley of little horses and his mother.”