A home for Steamboat

Casey Rislov

Book - 2025

A Home for Steamboat is a story about a horse with an unbreakable spirit. Widely known as the symbol of Wyoming, the bucking bronco's silhouette has been a symbol on the state's license plate since 1936. He was cared for as a foal by a loving family and then later sold to a wealthy ranch owner. His cowhands tried to break the young horse, but the born bucker had a mind of his own. Steamboat could not be broken. He was sold again, this time to a man who felt a kinship with the horse's strong will and independence. Steamboat had finally found his true home. Based on the famous horse's life, A Home for Steamboat will inspire young cowboys and cowgirls to never give up.

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Subjects
Genres
Biographies
Creative nonfiction
Illustrated works
Picture books
Published
Wyoming, USA : Mountain Stars Press [2025]
Language
English
Main Author
Casey Rislov (author)
Other Authors
Zachary Pullen (illustrator)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
"Based on the famous horse's life..."--Dust jacket cover.
Physical Description
1 volume (unpaged) : color illustrations ; 27 cm
ISBN
9798218398620
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Rislov's fact-based, illustrated children's book celebrates a spirited, history-making horse. This well-told, absorbing tale for young children and intermediate readers is based (as the author explains at the end of the book) on the real Steamboat, the horse whose bucking bronco silhouette has been on Wyoming license plates since 1936. Told with engaging immediacy and at times near-poetic resonance, Steamboat's saga is here conveyed by a grandfather entertaining his young granddaughter Lena while the pair do chores around his ranch. Before Grandpa met the famous horse, he tells Lena, Steamboat was a rambunctious foal that "pranced and bucked from the day he was born," running free on a ranch "in the endless sage-colored fields and under the big, blue sky." Sadly, when Steamboat was 3 years old, "his golden mornings, rich wildflower scents, and the sound of coyote baying at the moon came to an end." Sold to a cattle ranch where he is corralled and mistreated, the young horse gets his name due to his angry snort when he'd buck off the mean ranch hands who tried to break him. (Grandpa says that he attended a rodeo where every would-be rider hit the ground as "Steamboat's eyes would flash, his mane would rise like a wind gust, and his legs would disappear in a cloud of dust.") Clearly, Steamboat loved to buck, but Grandpa saw a free spirit in danger of being crushed by the unfeeling ranch hands; he bought the horse, took him home, and gave him the nurturing he needed to become "the bronc he was born to be," famous as "the horse that couldn't be rode." This colorful tale is an inspired collaboration between prolific children's author Rislov and noted illustrator Pullen, who teamed up previously on Rislov's Western-themed booksRowdy Randy (2019) andThe Rowdy Randy Wild West Show (2022). Pullen's full-page, painted illustrations are both strikingly realistic (in the anatomy of horses and cattle, the beautiful big-sky landscapes, and meticulously rendered folds in clothing) and fanciful; the human characters have oversized heads and exaggerated facial features. A well-crafted, heartfelt narrative with lush and quirky visuals and a message of perseverance. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.