The True Story of Zippy Chippy: The Little Horse
That Couldn’t. By Artie Bennett. Illustrated by Dave Szalay. NorthSouth Books. $17.95.
Sleeping Bronty. By Christy Webster. Illustrated by Gladys
Jose. Andrews McMeel. $8.99.
The cliché of the lovable loser is such a
well-established literary trope that it can be made to fit comfortably onto
pretty much anybody, even a person who is not exactly a loser in the
traditional sense. The label can even be pinned to a horse – and Artie Bennett
pins it very deftly indeed, with more than a hint of sweetness and soulfulness,
on Zippy Chippy, a peculiarly named, now-elderly thoroughbred racehorse that
never finished first in a single race. Now, in horse racing, failing to come in
first is not exactly the same as “not winning,” as bettors know well: the sport
has a win/place/show arrangement for the first three finishers, and Zippy
Chippy did place eight times and show on a dozen occasions in his 100-race
career. But niceties like that would only get in the way of a rollicking good
yarn that Bennett tells with relish and that Dave Szalay illustrates with
panache. The fact is that Zippy Chippy – scarcely a name destined for
greatness, and one quite out of keeping with the usual naming conventions of
horse racing – was a temperamental and unpredictable horse, possibly with great
potential (he came from championship blood lines) but without any noticeable competitive
spirit. Bennett neatly explains (and Szalay neatly shows) what happened when Zippy
Chippy refused to leave the starting gate, stopped mid-race to enjoy the smells
wafting through the air, or played mischievous pranks ranging from sticking out
his tongue at people to grabbing and chewing the hats of nonplused observers. Uncooperative
thoroughbreds do not usually live long – racing is a business, and owners
quickly move on to better opportunities – but Zippy Chippy was fortunate, after
losing 19 races in a row, to be sold to a horse trainer from Puerto Rico who
genuinely liked him and whose daughter bonded with him, turning the horse into
a family member rather than merely an investment. Bennett neatly chronicles the
ups and downs of Zippy Chippy’s adventures, some of which are hilarious, such
as his loss in a 40-yard sprint against a human baseball player. Temperamental
and sometimes even ill-tempered he may have been, but Zippy Chippy had a
certain way of reaching out that endeared him to people – such as his decision
to stop just out of the starting gate in his final race to bow to the crowd.
Bennett overdoes it a bit when complimenting Zippy Chippy by saying that it not
only takes guts to compete but also “takes courage to dream” – there is little
sense of anything thoughtful or introverted in this horse’s story. But the
conclusion that “Zippy won in the end,” won because
he lost every race he ran, is inescapably, delightfully twisted. And the
back-of-the-book Author’s Note, which also explains how Zippy Chippy got his
name, explains just how and in what sense this ever-losing horse can and should
be seen as a winner, not only for himself but also, as it turns out, for the
other horses with which he lives in his post-racing career. “Zippy has earned
more money in retirement than he ever did in racing,” Bennett points out, but
money is not the main measure of success here. Like other “lovable losers” (or,
in this case, lovable sort-of losers), Zippy Chippy connects with people
precisely because we all know what it feels like to come in second or third –
or last – in our everyday lives. The funniest statement in the book, appearing
only in the Author’s Note, is that apparently Zippy Chippy was not the biggest loser ever among
thoroughbreds – there is evidence that he came in second in that category, too.
But it scarcely matters: loser or not, Zippy Chippy, as portrayed by Bennett
and Szalay, is lovable – and that, rather than win/place/show statistics, turns
out to be what matters.
The eventual success of a lovable (or at
least admirable) loser is a standard feature of fairy tales, and comes through
even when a story is twisted pretty much beyond recognition – as in Sleeping Bronty, which turns “Sleeping
Beauty” into a dinosaur-shaped pretzel. This deliberately overdone board-book
retelling in the “Once Before Time” series will be enjoyable mostly for young
children who already know the original tale, because a lot of the fun in this
(+++) book comes from the ways in which the story deviates from its source. It
is not just that the cast of characters consists entirely of dinosaurs –
including, yes, beaked fairies with vaguely dinosaur-ish bodies and wings. What
is enjoyable here is the way some traditional story elements are modified for
sauropod purposes: the three good fairies wish for little Bronty to have a long
neck, long tail and long life (the first two features being very definitely
characteristic of all sauropods: parents can explain to young readers and
pre-readers just what a Brontosaurus is). There is nothing especially evil
here, just “a selfish fairy named Rhonda” who wishes for Bronty to “prick her
tail on a thorn” and “fall into a deep sleep.” Of course, that is just what
happens – one of the good fairies did wish for Bronty to have a long tail, after
all – so Rhonda, rather illogically, somehow becomes queen as soon as Bronty is
indisposed. Now what will the members of this top-hatted,
elegant-clothes-wearing court do? The answer is amusingly absurd, tying not to
anything romantic but to Bronty’s princely friend, a food-loving dinosaur cook who
especially enjoys making five-bean chili so spicy that it causes Bronty to go
“HICCUP!” The chili, it turns out, is just the thing to revive Bronty, so the
prince whips up a suitably spicy batch, drops a bit into sleeping Bronty’s
mouth, and awakens her. And off she goes to confront Rhonda, who commandeers the
vat of chili, eats a big spoonful, and gets a case of hiccups so bad that she
runs away, leaving the crown behind. This is all about as silly as it gets, which
is to say very silly indeed. Sleeping
Bronty certainly will not supplant the original fairy tale, in which the
princess loses her realm through the machinations of an evil fairy but becomes
a winner when the right prince shows up to rescue her. But young kids who love
imaginary dinosaurs – especially very
young kids – will find plenty to enjoy in this smiley send-up of a well-worn
tale in which, as so often in stories, good wins and evil is left with little
more than hiccups.
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