Quiz Questions
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Q1 of 45
What is the name of the horse at the centre of the story?
- Trooper — the name given to him by his first military handler
- Biscuit — a brown gelding bought at market by the Narracott family
- Joey — a bright bay horse with a distinctive cross on his forehead
- Topthorn — the black horse he befriends in the cavalry
Q2 of 45
Who buys Joey at the opening of the novel?
- Albert's uncle, who runs the neighbouring farm
- Captain Nicholls, who wants him for the cavalry regiment
- Ted Narracott, a farmer who bids against his better judgement
- A horse dealer from Exeter who resells him immediately
Q3 of 45
What is the name of Albert's father?
- Bill Narracott — the eldest of the Narracott brothers on the farm
- John Narracott — a quiet man who works hard but drinks too much
- Sam Narracott — Albert's father who served in a previous war
- Ted Narracott — a stubborn farmer who makes a reckless bid at auction
Q4 of 45
Who trains Joey and forms the closest bond with him before the war?
- The farm hand, who has years of experience with horses
- Albert, Ted's son, who trains him with patience and trust from the beginning
- Ted Narracott, who uses him for ploughing on the farm
- Captain Nicholls, who takes him for cavalry training in the first weeks
Q5 of 45
What does Albert promise Joey before he is sold to the army?
- That he will find him wherever the war takes him
- That he will buy him back before the end of the year
- That he will always bring him carrots and apples every week
- That he will keep the field ready for his return
Q6 of 45
Which officer buys Joey for the army and treats him kindly at first?
- Sergeant Warren, who oversees the cavalry horses
- Major Martin, the commanding officer of the Devon regiment
- Captain Nicholls, who sketches Joey and promises Albert he will care for him
- Lieutenant James, who recognises Joey's quality immediately
Q7 of 45
What happens to Captain Nicholls during the cavalry charge in France?
- He survives but is invalided home, losing contact with Joey permanently
- He is wounded and captured, spending the rest of the war as a prisoner
- He is separated from Joey but survives to search for him later
- He is killed in the charge — one of many officers lost in the attack
Q8 of 45
Who is Topthorn?
- The horse owned by the German officer Hauptmann Weiss
- A black stallion who becomes Joey's greatest friend and companion
- The lead horse of the British cavalry who guides Joey in battle
- A German warhorse who becomes Joey's closest companion through the war
Q9 of 45
What does Emilie — the French girl — do when the German soldiers come for the horses?
- She begs her grandfather to buy them back from the soldiers
- She pleads with the soldiers and wins a promise they will not be used in battle
- She hides with the horses but cannot prevent them being taken
- She hides Joey and Topthorn in the barn beneath piles of hay
Q10 of 45
How does Joey end up in No Man's Land?
- He bolts during a bombardment and runs blind through the wire
- He is driven out of the German lines during a night attack
- He is released deliberately by a soldier who can no longer bear his suffering
- He escapes from a burning stable and runs in panic through the lines
Q11 of 45
How is Joey rescued from the barbed wire in No Man's Land?
- A British and German soldier come out together, share tools and free him
- The artillery stops and a stretcher party retrieves him
- Albert crawls out under fire and cuts him free with wire cutters
- A medic goes out with a white flag and a German officer assists
Q12 of 45
What does Albert do when the army announces horses will be auctioned off after the war?
- He writes to the army requesting Joey be assigned to his regiment
- He sends his father with the money to buy Joey at the auction
- He asks his commanding officer to identify and reserve Joey for him
- He saves all his wages and travels to France to bid for Joey
Q13 of 45
What threat hangs over Joey at the post-war auction?
- He may be kept by the French army as compensation for losses
- He may be given to a farm where Albert will never find him
- He may be bought by a slaughterhouse as horses have little value after the war
- He may be shot as he has become too ill to recover
Q14 of 45
Who helps Albert identify Joey among all the other horses at the auction?
- An old French farmer who recognises the cross on Joey's forehead
- Major Martin, who has kept records of every horse in the regiment
- Emilie's grandfather, who has been searching for Albert since the armistice
- Sergeant Warren, who served alongside Albert and knows the horse
Q15 of 45
How does Albert prove to the auctioneer that Joey is his horse?
- He shows the sketch Captain Nicholls made and Joey comes to him
- He describes the cross markings in exact detail matching army records
- He calls Joey's name in a particular way and Joey responds unmistakably
- He produces the original sale receipt from Ted Narracott's purchase
Q16 of 45
Why does Ted Narracott's decision to buy Joey create problems for the family?
- Because Ted buys Joey to spite his neighbour at auction, spending rent money the family cannot afford to lose
- Because Joey arrives already injured from the market, requiring expensive treatment
- Because Joey is a thoroughbred unsuitable for farm work, wasting money they desperately need
- Because Ted lies to his wife about the price, creating lasting distrust
Q17 of 45
What does the relationship between Albert and Joey suggest about the bond between humans and animals?
- That farm animals need human direction to fulfil their potential and cannot thrive independently
- That bonds of trust and love between species can be as deep and enduring as those between people — Joey responds to Albert across years and continents
- That animals understand language when spoken to consistently and patiently over time
- That children form stronger bonds with animals than adults do because they lack prejudice
Q18 of 45
How does Morpurgo use multiple human perspectives to tell Joey's story?
- By alternating chapters between Albert and Joey so both viewpoints are equally represented
- By having different humans narrate sections — Captain Nicholls, Emilie, the German soldiers — so Joey's journey is seen through many eyes
- By having Joey narrate in first person, filtering all human experience through an animal consciousness
- By using an omniscient narrator who has access to all characters' thoughts simultaneously
Q19 of 45
What does Emilie's relationship with Joey and Topthorn represent in the novel?
- The resilience of childhood — that children can find joy and connection even in the worst circumstances
- The importance of female characters in a war predominantly depicted through male experience
- The neutrality of animals — that Joey and Topthorn belong to no nation and can be loved by French, German and British alike
- The healing power of nature during a period when everything human has been destroyed
Q20 of 45
How does the novel present the experience of the cavalry horse differently from human soldiers' accounts of war?
- By showing that animals recover from trauma faster than humans, offering a form of hope
- By emphasising the physical landscape — horses experience the terrain differently and Morpurgo uses this to describe the Western Front from ground level
- By suggesting horses form regimental loyalties similar to soldiers, investing in the outcome of battles
- By removing political motivation — Joey obeys, suffers and endures without understanding why, making his suffering both simpler and more innocent than a soldier's
Q21 of 45
What is the significance of the British and German soldiers cooperating to free Joey from No Man's Land?
- It shows that the war was nearly over and both sides were ready for peace
- It demonstrates that horses were valued above human lives, which is a deliberate irony Morpurgo intends
- It allows Morpurgo to introduce two new characters who later correspond after the war
- It proves that ordinary soldiers on both sides shared a common humanity that their commanders did not — animals could cross the lines that men were forced to defend
Q22 of 45
How does Joey's survival function thematically in a novel where so many characters die?
- As a narrative convenience — Morpurgo needs Joey to survive to fulfil the promise Albert made
- As a symbol of hope and continuity — Joey connecting Albert's boyhood world to the post-war future
- As evidence that survival is purely random in war — Joey lives by chance not merit
- As a reward for animal innocence — the novel suggests creatures without moral agency deserve protection
Q23 of 45
Why does Morpurgo choose a horse rather than a human as his central narrator?
- Because horses were more numerous than soldiers and their perspective represents the majority experience of the war
- Because a horse narrator makes the book accessible to younger readers who might find direct accounts of combat too disturbing
- Because it allows Morpurgo to research the cavalry's role, which is underrepresented in First World War literature
- Because the horse's inability to judge, choose sides or understand politics allows Morpurgo to show the war's horror without the distortions of ideology or nationalism
Q24 of 45
How does the Devon farming landscape at the novel's opening contrast with the Western Front?
- The farm is presented as ordered and productive while the Front is chaotic — this contrast is purely descriptive
- The landscape contrast establishes Joey's nature as a creature of open fields and peace, making his suffering in the trenches feel like a violation
- Both the farm and the Front are presented as demanding and harsh — Morpurgo does not sentimentalise the rural world
- The farm represents an England worth fighting for, while the trenches show what happens when that world is forgotten
Q25 of 45
What does Albert's underage enlistment reveal about his character?
- That his love for Joey and his sense of promise override his fear and the rules — his commitment is absolute
- That Albert has no other prospects and the army represents the best opportunity he has
- That he is reckless and seeking adventure — the standard motivation of young men who enlisted
- That the army's recruitment standards were dangerously lax, which Morpurgo criticises
Q26 of 45
How does the treatment of horses by different armies in the novel comment on attitudes towards war?
- German officers treat horses better than British ones — Morpurgo uses this to complicate simple patriotic readings
- The British cavalry treat horses best because of their longer tradition of horsemanship
- All armies treat horses identically as military equipment, which underlines the dehumanising effect of industrial war
- The variation in how different individuals treat Joey — some with cruelty, some with deep care — suggests that kindness is individual not national
Q27 of 45
What role does Grandpa Emilie play in the novel's resolution?
- He tracks Albert through the army records and contacts him to arrange the reunion with Joey
- He refuses to sell Joey back, wanting him to remain in France as a memorial to the war
- He outbids the slaughterhouse at auction, then recognises Albert and accepts only a symbolic sum for Joey
- He sends a letter to Albert's regiment containing the sketch Captain Nicholls drew of Joey
Q28 of 45
How does the novel handle the theme of loyalty across both the animal and human worlds?
- By showing loyalty as exclusively an animal virtue — humans in the novel are consistently shown to betray each other
- By demonstrating that wartime loyalty to country overrides all personal bonds, including Joey's bond with Albert
- By mirroring Joey's loyalty to Albert with Albert's refusal to abandon his promise, suggesting loyalty is the novel's highest moral value
- By presenting loyalty as naive — characters who are loyal suffer more than those who are pragmatic
Q29 of 45
Why is War Horse considered an important work of First World War literature for young people?
- Because it is based directly on a real horse whose story Morpurgo discovered in Devon
- Because it was the first children's novel to deal with the First World War without simplifying it into heroism
- Because it presents the human cost of war through an innocent lens that avoids political argument while conveying the waste and suffering viscerally
- Because it is the only fictional account of the war written from an animal's perspective
Q30 of 45
What does Joey's final homecoming to the Devon farm represent?
- A personal victory for Albert over the war that tried to take everything from him
- A simple happy ending that Morpurgo uses to reward young readers after the difficulty of the war sections
- The restoration of a pre-war world that can never fully return — Joey is home but the men who died are not
- Evidence that the bond between boy and horse was stronger than anything the war could destroy
Q31 of 45
How does Morpurgo's use of first-person animal narration both enable and limit his exploration of war?
- It enables emotional immediacy and moral innocence while limiting political analysis — Joey can show us what war does but cannot explain why it happens, which is precisely Morpurgo's point about the futility of the conflict
- It limits the novel to the cavalry experience, excluding the trench warfare that defines most First World War narratives
- It enables total freedom — an animal narrator can go anywhere and see everything without the constraints of human psychology
- It enables a comic perspective — the gap between what Joey observes and what readers understand creates irony
Q32 of 45
In what ways does War Horse engage with pastoral tradition while simultaneously critiquing it?
- The novel invokes pastoral England as what the war was supposedly fought to preserve, then shows the pastoral world itself being destroyed — horses ploughed fields and then dragged guns, the same animals serving both peace and war
- It purely celebrates pastoral values — the Devon farm represents everything worth preserving and the war represents its destruction
- Morpurgo rejects pastoral tradition entirely — the farm scenes are presented as harsh and unromantic from the start
- The pastoral setting is purely biographical — Morpurgo lived in Devon and uses the landscape without symbolic intention
Q33 of 45
How does the novel use the structure of the quest narrative to shape Joey's journey?
- The quest structure is present but inverted — it is Albert who seeks Joey, while Joey's movement is passive, creating a dual quest: Joey's survival and Albert's search
- Joey's journey is not a quest because quests require intentional goal-directed movement — Joey simply goes where he is taken
- The quest structure is used ironically — each 'test' Joey faces is imposed by human folly rather than heroic necessity
- Morpurgo uses the quest structure conventionally — Joey moves through tests toward reunion, each section representing a trial that strengthens him
Q34 of 45
What does the auction scene reveal about how Britain treated its war animals after 1918?
- That the animals who served were treated as surplus equipment — their loyalty and service counted for nothing in the peace, and many were sold to slaughter
- That the army honoured its animals by ensuring they were sold only to caring owners
- That the auction system was efficient and most horses found good homes quickly
- That public affection for war horses was so strong that the government intervened to protect them
Q35 of 45
How does War Horse contribute to what critics call the 'de-heroising' of First World War narrative?
- By filtering the war through a non-combatant perspective — Joey cannot perform heroism, only endure, and this endurance without glory strips war of its conventional narrative rewards
- By showing that cavalry charges were effective tactics, restoring military honour to the war's reputation
- By focusing on the Home Front rather than combat, showing the war's impact on ordinary civilian life
- By celebrating individual acts of bravery — Captain Nicholls and Albert are both heroic figures
Q36 of 45
How does the relationship between Joey and Topthorn function as an emotional register for the novel's darkest moments?
- Their friendship is a structural parallel to Albert and Joey — showing that bonds of loyalty exist across species boundaries
- Topthorn represents the horses that did not survive, making him a memorial figure rather than a character
- Topthorn's death is the novel's most devastating moment precisely because it is private — no human witnesses it — and his loss shows that the war destroys the innocent without ceremony or recognition
- Their relationship provides comic relief — two horses observing human absurdity offers levity in dark sections
Q37 of 45
What does Morpurgo's decision to set the opening and closing in Devon achieve structurally and thematically?
- It is purely autobiographical — Morpurgo grew up in Devon and uses the landscape for personal rather than structural reasons
- It creates a circular structure that provides emotional satisfaction — the return home feels earned — while the changed landscape suggests the world Joey returns to has been altered by loss even if Joey himself cannot know this
- It limits the novel's scope unnecessarily — a broader opening would establish the wider world Joey enters
- It establishes the pastoral as unchanging — Devon is the same before and after, suggesting continuity over rupture
Q38 of 45
How does the novel treat the relationship between language and power, given that its narrator cannot speak?
- Joey's inability to speak is simply a narrative constraint that Morpurgo works around through description
- The novel suggests that the most important communication transcends language — Albert's whistle, Joey's physical response — and that the war's horror partly lies in the excessive use of language to justify unjustifiable acts
- The language question is irrelevant — Morpurgo does not engage with communication as a theme
- Joey's silence gives humans all communicative power — he can only respond, never initiate, which mirrors the powerlessness of soldiers following orders
Q39 of 45
In what sense can War Horse be read as a novel about class as well as war?
- The novel critiques class exclusively through the officer corps — upper-class commanders are shown as incompetent throughout
- Class is not relevant — the war cuts across class distinctions and the novel presents soldiers as equal regardless of background
- The Narracotts' poverty, Ted's humiliation at the auction and Albert's inability to save Joey without luck and charity all reflect class vulnerability — the poor have least to lose and lose the most
- Morpurgo presents class conflict between officers and men as the war's central domestic drama
Q40 of 45
How does War Horse handle the tension between sentimentality and critique that often marks children's war literature?
- It avoids sentimentality entirely — Morpurgo is a realist writer who keeps emotional distance throughout
- The tension is unresolved — critics disagree about whether the happy ending undermines the novel's darker achievements
- It resolves the tension in favour of sentimentality — the happy ending overrides any critical reading
- It earns its emotional moments through accumulation of loss — Nicholls, Topthorn, the French family — so that when Albert and Joey are reunited the feeling is not sentimental indulgence but genuine earned relief, having passed through genuine darkness
Q41 of 45
How does Morpurgo use the recurring motif of Joey's markings — the cross on his forehead — to suggest the animal's symbolic significance?
- Morpurgo includes the marking as a realistic detail — many bay horses have such markings
- The marking identifies Joey to Albert across years and continents, making it the physical sign of the bond that cannot be broken — it is how love persists through all the war's destructions, a scar that is also a seal
- The cross is a religious symbol suggesting Joey is a Christ-like figure whose suffering redeems others
- The cross is a practical identification mark used by cavalry officers to track individual horses
Q42 of 45
What does War Horse reveal about the relationship between loyalty and survival when applied to both humans and animals in wartime?
- That loyalty is a purely human quality that the novel uses Joey to illuminate through contrast
- That loyalty is incompatible with survival — every loyal character in the novel faces greater danger
- That survival instinct overrides loyalty — both Albert and Joey eventually act selfishly
- That loyalty gives survival meaning — Joey's journey and Albert's search are both driven by loyalty, and both survive; the novel suggests that the will to keep faith may itself be a survival mechanism rather than a liability
Q43 of 45
How does the novel navigate the challenge of representing extreme suffering without becoming exploitative or desensitising?
- By using comic episodes between traumatic ones to reset the reader's emotional register
- By minimising suffering — Morpurgo elides the most violent scenes
- By focusing on human rather than animal suffering, keeping Joey protected from the worst
- By filtering suffering through Joey's limited comprehension — the horse cannot fully process what is being done to it or to others, which keeps the novel's violence from becoming pornographic while retaining its emotional truth
Q44 of 45
In what sense is War Horse a novel about witness as much as about action?
- Joey witnesses human history without being able to act on what he sees — he watches soldiers die, hears plans he cannot report, observes cruelty he cannot prevent; his witnessing is the novel's moral position, that some suffering can only be honoured by being seen and remembered
- The witness theme applies only to Albert — Morpurgo uses Joey to show Albert's limited perspective
- It is not about witness — Joey is an active participant in every scene, not merely an observer
- Witness in War Horse means documentary accuracy — the novel witnesses historical events faithfully
Q45 of 45
How does the novel's ending resist simple redemption while still providing emotional resolution?
- The ending restores Joey to Albert but cannot restore anything else the war destroyed — the dead remain dead, the landscape remains scarred, and Joey carries physical marks from his service; resolution and irreversibility coexist, refusing the false comfort of an ending that forgets what preceded it
- The ending is deliberately unsatisfying — Morpurgo wants readers to feel the war's lasting damage
- The ending is ambiguous — it is unclear whether Joey truly recognises Albert or simply responds to a familiar voice
- The ending is fully redemptive — Joey's return home resolves all the novel's tensions