The Good-Luck Horse

The Good-Luck Horse is a children's picture book by author Chih-Yi and American illustrator Plato Chan. The Good-Luck Horse was published by Whittlesey House in 1943. It was a 1944 Caldecott Medal honoree.[1][2] This story has adventures of a horse that a boy had made out of paper and then changed into a real horse by a magician. He was named the good-luck horse because his fortunes fell and rose.

The Good-Luck Horse
First edition
AuthorChih-Yi
IllustratorPlato Chan
CountryUnited States
GenreChildren's picture book
PublisherWhittlesey House
Publication date
1943

Plot

The Good-Luck Horse is based on a Chinese folk-tale. It tells the story of a paper horse that was created by a kind magician. Since the horse was magical it was able to do anything it was told to do. The horse then became a problem because it was bringing bad luck to its owner until the horse ran away. When a war broke out the horse met another horse and together they were able to end the war, earning him the name of the good-luck horse.[3]

gollark: Radiation poisoning?
gollark: Er. DNA and cell damage? I don't know exactly what would happen, but in the long run cancer and stuff.
gollark: Gamma rays have the "advantage" of being ionizing and thus messing you up in more ways than just purely heating you.
gollark: While they're electromagnetic radiation, different bits of the spectrum have very different properties and are generated in different ways.
gollark: 50m range would also not be very practical for space things.

References

  1. "The Good-Luck Horse". Goodreads. Retrieved 2016-01-25.
  2. Chan, Chih-Yi and Plato (1943-01-01). THE GOOD- LUCK HORSE. Whittlesey House.
  3. E.L.B. (Nov 14, 1943). "Review 1 -- no Title". New York Times. p. 2 via ProQuest.


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