Review: The Horse God Built

Book Review: The Horse God Built, by Lawrence Scanlan, 3 stars

 

Most of us know the legend of Secretariat, the tall, handsome chestnut racehorse whose string of honors runs long and rich: the only two-year-old ever to win Horse of the Year, in 1972; winner in 1973 of the Triple Crown, his times in all three races still unsurpassed; featured on the cover of Time, Newsweek, and Sports Illustrated; the only horse listed on ESPN's top fifty athletes of the twentieth century (ahead of Mickey Mantle). His final race at Toronto's Woodbine Racetrack is a touchstone memory for horse lovers everywhere. Yet while Secretariat will be remembered forever, one man, Eddie "Shorty" Sweat, who was pivotal to the great horse's success, has been all but forgotten---until now. 

In The Horse God Built, bestselling equestrian writer Lawrence Scanlan has written a tribute to an exceptional man that is also a backroads journey to a corner of the racing world rarely visited. As a young black man growing up in South Carolina, Eddie Sweat struggled at several occupations before settling on the job he was born for---groom to North America's finest racehorses. As Secretariat's groom, loyal friend, and protector, Eddie understood the horse far better than anyone else. A wildly generous man who could read a horse with his eyes, he shared in little of the financial success or glamour of Secretariat's wins on the track, but won the heart of Big Red with his soft words and relentless devotion. 

In Scanlan's rich narrative, we get a groom's-eye view of the racing world and the vantage of a man who spent every possible moment with the horse he loved, yet who often basked in the horse's glory from the sidelines. More than anything else, The Horse God Built is a moving portrait of the powerful bond between human and horse.


Genre: non-fiction

Publication date: April 2010 (for the current Kindle version; I read the paperback from 2008).

Mature content: no

Review: The Horse God built is an original book and I learned a few things about horse racing I had no idea of before. 
 
But I found the writing too inconsistent (there isn't a clear timeline in the book, it just goes back and forth) and the level of detail is overwhelming (I'm pretty sure that, for example, how the people being interviewed by the author were dressed at that specific time is completely irrelevant for the overall story). 

In the end, I now know a lot about what other people thought about Secretariat, but very little about the horse itself - or its groom, for that matter. 

This may be an interesting book for die-hard horse fans, but overall I can't bring myself to actively recommend it. 
 
Happy readings otherwise,

The Book Worm, book blog

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