| Author | Title | genre |
| Adams, Richard | Traveller1 | 2 |
|
Balch, Glenn |
The Wild Mare |
1 |
|
|
Buck, Wild |
1 |
| Chipperfield, Joseph E. | Dark Fury | 1 |
| Ghost Horse | 1 | |
| Guy, Jonathan | Cornharrow2 | 1 |
|
Hawkes, John |
Sweet William, The Story of an Old Racehorse |
2 |
| Hinkle, Thomas C | Cinchfoot | 1 |
| Mitchell, Elyne | Dancing Brumby’s Rainbow | 1 |
|
|
Moon Filly |
1 |
| Silver Brumby’s Daughter | 1 | |
| The Silver Brumby | 1 | |
| Silver Brumby Kingdom | 1 | |
| Silver Brumbies of the South | 1 | |
| The Thousandth Brumby | 1 | |
| Rutherford, Montgomery C. | Mightnight, Wild Stallion of the West | 1 |
| Sewell, Anna | Black Beauty | 2 |
|
Stanton, Mary |
The Heavenly Horse from the Outermost West |
2 |
|
Stanton, Mary |
Piper at the Gate |
2 |
1Richard Adam's Traveller contains awful, "Foghorn Leghorn" type Southern dialect, and I found the
book unreadable. Other people seem to like it, though.
2 Cornharrow is about donkeys.
I realize there have been many, many more horse books written than what is listed here, but most of them
are primarily or completely from the human's point of view. Additions to this list of books that are told from
the horse's viewpoint are appreciated.








