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Horse
Horse
Author: Geraldine Brooks
A discarded painting in a junk pile, a skeleton in an attic, and the greatest racehorse in American history: from these strands, a Pulitzer Prize winner braids a sweeping story of spirit, obsession, and injustice across American history — Kentucky, 1850. An enslaved groom named Jarret and a bay foal forge a bond of understanding that will carry t...  more »
ISBN-13: 9780399562969
ISBN-10: 0399562966
Publication Date: 6/14/2022
Pages: 416
Rating:
  • Currently 3.8/5 Stars.
 22

3.8 stars, based on 22 ratings
Publisher: Viking
Book Type: Hardcover
Other Versions: Paperback
Members Wishing: 75
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

sixteendays avatar reviewed Horse on + 130 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
I don't like horses. I grew up with them, and had a connection with one once, but in general they are not the animals for me. I do, however, love Geraldine Brooks, so despite my disinterest in the subject here, I wanted to give this a read.

Interestingly enough, the horse in question, Lexington, along with his groomer/trainer/best friend Jarrett, has the best story in this novel. Their connection with each other, on an emotional and spiritual level, is palpable.

Unfortunately, there is a lot more than their story shoehorned in to the novel. Brooks takes on the history of American horseracing and breeding, art history, race relations, the Civil War, professional workplace sexism, modern police brutality, and more, and it's just too many plates to hold up in one story without all of them suffering.

Though Jarrett was by far my favorite character in this novel, I do not believe that his story, or the story of Theo the art historian grad student, was Brooks's stories to tell. Framing what happens to Theo through the view of his white girlfriend was tone-deaf at best. Divorced from the other topics covered in the novel, and in the hands of a different author, I think both of their stories would have been much more powerful and honest.
cathyskye avatar reviewed Horse on + 2334 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Geraldine Brooks has done it again: written a transcendent book that is so much more than the sum of its parts. Brooks is a must-read author for me, but Horse was made even more special by my teenage racehorse madness years. I read every book I could get my hands on about Thoroughbred racing and its stars. My mother indulged my obsession: when she went to Kentucky on a genealogy trip, I got to overdose on racehorses, meeting greats like Citation and actually seeing the grave of Lexington, the horse that Brooks centered her book upon.

In Brooks' Afterword, she says, "As I began to research Lexington's life, it became clear to me that this novel could not merely be about a racehorse, it would also need to be about race," and she does this in masterful fashion. Whether it's watching the years pass and Lexington's groom being known as one owner's Jarret after another to-- finally-- having his own name untainted by slavery (Jarret Lewis) or watching the unfolding relationship between the interracial couple Jess and Theo in 2019 and the differences in their experiences and outlooks on the world, the reader becomes totally engaged in the characters' lives.

Horse is so much more than a fascinating animal story. It is also a powerful story of art, science, and-- above all-- race. It is a story to take in deep. It is a story to remember
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perryfran avatar reviewed Horse on + 1240 more book reviews
I have been a fan of Geraldine Brooks for several years and have read and enjoyed several of her novels including Year of Wonders, People of the Book, and March. Of these, I think I enjoyed PEOPLE OF THE BOOK the most but HORSE definitely gave it a run for the money.

HORSE is a really great historical novel telling the story of Lexington, perhaps the greatest thoroughbred of all time. The story is told from several different perspectives. First, a Nigerian American art historian, Theo, finds a very dingy painting of a horse in his neighbor's trash. Turns out after taking the painting to be restored at the Smithsonian, it is found to be a portrait of Lexington as a young colt. This leads him to Jess, an Australian working for the Smithsonian who is an expert on bones and who happens to be examining the skeleton of Lexington that was stored in the Smithsonian attic. But then the meat of the story is about the life of the horse and its groom, Jarret, a young black who was present at the foaling in 1850 and stays with the horse throughout his storied career with record breaking victories in the pre-Civil War south. The story also tells of the artist, Thomas Scott, who made several paintings of Lexington including the one found by Theo.

I was enthralled by this novel. Although I am not a horse racing enthusiast, this one had me hooked from the start. It is definitely more than the story of a horse, it is also about race issues prior to the Civil War and how they are still with us today. The story was poignant with its instances of the abuse of these magnificent animals and it also had some very tragic moments including the deep-rooted prejudices of today and how they affected both Theo and Jess. This is a story that I will find hard to forget.


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