
A Horseman Riding By
1978 • Drama, War & Politics
Having been invalided out of the Boer War, Paul Craddock buys Shallowford, a manor house and estate in Devon, with money from his late father's scrap-yard business. He soon becomes a much-respected "Squire" who is determined to treat all his tenant farmers fairly, unlike his predecessor.
Why you should read the novels
Step into the richly drawn world of R. F. Delderfield’s A Horseman Riding By trilogy and experience the saga as it was originally imagined. Across Long Summer Day, Post of Honour, and The Green Gauntlet, Delderfield traces decades of change in rural England with warmth, wit, and sweeping historical detail that no screen can fully capture.
The novels deliver the intimate inner lives of Paul Craddock and the valley community, exploring love, land, duty, and social upheaval with nuance. Delderfield’s prose brings seasons, fields, and village voices to life, offering a deep sense of place and history that rewards attentive readers and fans of period fiction alike.
If you enjoyed the TV series, the books offer a fuller journey: expanded character arcs, untold scenes, and the complete arc of the trilogy. Discover why A Horseman Riding By books remain classics—available in paperback, ebook, and audiobook for your next immersive read.
Adaptation differences
Scope and coverage are the biggest differences. The TV adaptation draws primarily from Long Summer Day and Post of Honour, leaving little to no space for The Green Gauntlet. Reading the trilogy completes the narrative arc, resolving threads the series only begins.
Character depth is richer on the page. The novels give sustained access to Paul Craddock’s thoughts and to many tenants and villagers, while the series condenses or merges some roles and streamlines motivations. Key conversations and backstories that shape decisions are abbreviated on screen.
Time and plotlines are compressed for television pacing. Multi-year developments in estate management, local politics, and community change unfold gradually in the books but are accelerated or hinted at in the series. Wartime sequences and their aftermath are simplified, with fewer side stories and less attention to long-term consequences.
Tone and thematic emphasis also shift. Delderfield’s novels tackle class tensions, economic modernization, and moral complexity more directly, whereas the 1978 broadcast foregrounds romance, scenic set pieces, and accessible drama. The books’ broader social canvas offers a more layered, historically grounded experience.
A Horseman Riding By inspired from
Post of Honour
by R. F. Delderfield
Long Summer Day
by R. F. Delderfield
The Green Gauntlet
by R. F. Delderfield