About the author
Ann Rinaldi (b.1934) is best known for her historical fiction. She had a grim childhood. Her mother died when she was small, and she was sent to live with an aunt and uncle. Here she was happy, until her father remarried, and took her to live with him and her stepmother. Although a newspaper manager himself, her father was virulently opposed to the idea of her writing, and he refused to allow her to go to college. She became a secretary, and after she married and had two children, started to write a weekly column in the Somerset Messenger Gazette. She carried on writing for newspapers, until in 1979 she published her first novel, Term Paper.
She has written several young adult works, amongst which is this fictionalisation of the story of Tempe Wick. Tempe Wick (1759–1822) lived near Morristown, and the family house was commandeered as the headquarters of General Arthur St Clair. Conditions were harsh and brutal for the thousands of soldiers camped round about, and according to local legend, when Tempe was out riding, some mutineers attempted to capture her horse. She rode away, and hid the horse in the house.
Finding the book
Still in print and readily available in both the USA and UK.
Links and sources
Ann Rinaldi on Simon & Schuster
More on Tempe Wick from Tuesday’s Horse
Bibliography (horse books only)
A Ride into Morning: the Story of Tempe Wick
Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, San Diego, 1991, 289 pp
Reprinted 1995
An historical novel: Tempe Wick hid her horse in her house to protect him from revolutionary soldiers. The story is narrated by Tempe’s 14-year-old cousin, Mary.
