Blood Horses: Notes of a Sportswriter's Son

John Jeremiah Sullivan
4.09
528 ratings 62 reviews
One evening late in his life, veteran sportswriter Mike Sullivan was asked by his son what he remembered best from his three decades in the press box. The answer came as a surprise. "I was at Secretariat's Derby, in '73. That was . . . just beauty, you know?" Sullivan didn't know, not the track had always been a place his father disappeared to once a year on business, a source of souvenir glasses and inscrutable passions in his Kentucky relatives. But in 2000, Sullivan, an editor and essayist for Harper's, decided to educate himself. He spent two years following the horse-both across the country, as he watched one season's juvenile crop prepare for the Triple Crown, and through time, as he tracked the animal's constant evolution in literature and art, from the ponies that appeared on the walls of European caves 30,000 years ago, to the mounts that carried the Indo-European language to the edges of the Old World, to the finely tuned but fragile yearlings that are auctioned off for millions of dollars apiece every spring and fall. The result is a witty, encyclopedic, and in the end profound meditation on what Edwin Muir called our "long-lost archaic companionship" with the horse. Incorporating elements of memoir and reportage, the Wunderkammer and the picture gallery, Blood Horses lets us see--as we have never seen before--the animal that, more than any other, made us who we are.
Genres: NonfictionSportsMemoirEssaysBiographyHorsesHorse RacingAnimalsAutobiographyBiography Memoir
272 Pages

Community Reviews:

5 star
191 (36%)
4 star
226 (43%)
3 star
85 (16%)
2 star
22 (4%)
1 star
4 (1%)

Readers also enjoyed

Other books by John Jeremiah Sullivan

Lists with this book

Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil
The Strange Career of Jim Crow
In Cold Blood
The Man Without Qualities
Gone Girl
Flutter, Volume One: Hell Can Wait
SKQ Reads
133 books38 voters
The Plot Against America
Snow
The Amateur Marriage
Jane Eyre
To Kill a Mockingbird
Pride and Prejudice
Classics 101
431 books111 voters