Horse People: Scenes from the Riding Life
Bestselling author Michael Korda's Horse People is the story-sometimes hilariously funny, sometimes sad and moving, always shrewdly observed-of a lifetime love affair with horses, and of the bonds that have linked humans with horses for more than ten thousand years. It is filled with intimate portraits of the kind of people, rich or poor, Eastern or Western, famous or humble, whose lives continue to revolve around the horse.



Korda is a terrific storyteller, and his book is intensely personal and seductive, a joy for everyone who loves horses. Even those who have never ridden will be happy to saddle up and follow him through the world of horses, horse people, and the riding life.
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Horse People: Scenes from the Riding Life
Bestselling author Michael Korda's Horse People is the story-sometimes hilariously funny, sometimes sad and moving, always shrewdly observed-of a lifetime love affair with horses, and of the bonds that have linked humans with horses for more than ten thousand years. It is filled with intimate portraits of the kind of people, rich or poor, Eastern or Western, famous or humble, whose lives continue to revolve around the horse.



Korda is a terrific storyteller, and his book is intensely personal and seductive, a joy for everyone who loves horses. Even those who have never ridden will be happy to saddle up and follow him through the world of horses, horse people, and the riding life.
24.99 In Stock
Horse People: Scenes from the Riding Life

Horse People: Scenes from the Riding Life

by Michael Korda

Narrated by Julian Elfer

Unabridged — 11 hours, 32 minutes

Horse People: Scenes from the Riding Life

Horse People: Scenes from the Riding Life

by Michael Korda

Narrated by Julian Elfer

Unabridged — 11 hours, 32 minutes

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Overview

Bestselling author Michael Korda's Horse People is the story-sometimes hilariously funny, sometimes sad and moving, always shrewdly observed-of a lifetime love affair with horses, and of the bonds that have linked humans with horses for more than ten thousand years. It is filled with intimate portraits of the kind of people, rich or poor, Eastern or Western, famous or humble, whose lives continue to revolve around the horse.



Korda is a terrific storyteller, and his book is intensely personal and seductive, a joy for everyone who loves horses. Even those who have never ridden will be happy to saddle up and follow him through the world of horses, horse people, and the riding life.

Editorial Reviews

The Washington Post

Korda's a lovely raconteur -- self-deprecating, informative, poignant, richly funny. He gives us not a gallop but a mosey through the equine world, illustrated in part with his own charming drawings. — Diana McLellan

The New York Times

Horse people, like yacht racers or Nascar enthusiasts and members of cults everywhere, can seem awfully myopic to civilians, their concerns so far beyond the ken of normal life it's hard to get a pulse going for them. And yet, there are times when the drama of the thing -- and there are dramas -- leaks air into this hermetically sealed environment. Think of this year's horsey heroes -- Seabiscuit and Funny Cide -- their improbable, riveting stories, their quirky and engaging human handlers. In this, the Year of the Horse, Korda's timing is perfect. And, happily, there are quirky and engaging humans all through Horse People. And a few horsey heroes. — Penelope Green

Kirkus Reviews

In this catalogue of horses and horse folk who have passed through the author's life, the animals possess tactility while the people are simply too-too. For someone who has "always tried to avoid a single-minded obsession about horses," veteran editor and author Korda (Another Life, 1999, etc.) has certainly spent a fair amount of time around the beasts and has thought long, hard, and well about their place in the world, in particular their relationship to humans. So he can be counted among those people who "love horses, or who know horses, or who make their living out of horses, or who just can't imagine what their lives would be like without horses." Korda's hungry curiosity to get into a horse's head and his interest in the social history of equestrianism give Horse People its charm and energy. He tells us much here about conformation and disposition, pasterns that are too long, the irregularity of hooves, fitting "within the square," enveloping all of it in a sense of affection. Less attractive is the depthless snobbishness of this world inhabited by the super-well-groomed super-rich, "old-school, good-looking, soft-spoken, wealthy, with perfect manners and a wardrobe full of the kind of country clothes Ralph Lauren has since made a fortune imitating." (Not that they don't have their travails: "Sheila, like many horse people, had given way to globalism, in the sense that the bulk of her barn help was Mexican.") A moderate windiness is excusable considering the sheer volume of material, but not such perfume-thick, studied prose as the "flash of orange, moving slowly" and "somewhere there is a picture of me on a small, shaggy pony at the age of about six," especially when the photo isreproduced a half-inch below. Sometimes achingly snooty, but in his stride Korda brings an engagingly lofty hand, both intimate and erudite, to the horses that have shaped his life. (17 line drawings by the author, 24 b&w photos)

From the Publisher

Characteristically amusing...[full of] exploits, peculiarities and foibles [that] make delicious anecdotal material.” — New York Times Book Review

New York Times Book Review

Characteristically amusing...[full of] exploits, peculiarities and foibles [that] make delicious anecdotal material.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940177810249
Publisher: Tantor Audio
Publication date: 07/28/2020
Edition description: Unabridged

Read an Excerpt

Horse People
Scenes from the Riding Life

Chapter One

My Kingdom for a Horse

The Statistical Abstract of the United States, a bottomless compendium of useless facts, indicates that there are over 5 million households owning a horse or horses in America today, and that the total horse population is, give or take a few horses, about 13.5 million.

That seems like a lot of horses in a country where most people had already made the switch to the automobile by the end of World War I, and in which horses -- with a few exceptions like police horses, or carriage horses in places like New York's Central Park, or among the Amish -- are no longer working animals, strictly speaking.

When I was a boy in England, the milkman had a horse that not only pulled his milk wagon but knew enough to stop at every house to which he delivered milk on his route, and fresh fruits and vegetables were hawked from horse-drawn carts, but all of that is long since gone. Even on cattle ranches, the horses are more ornamental and traditional than useful these days.

At the same time, horses aren't exactly pets, like dogs and cats. For one thing, they don't live in the house, or even visit it. However domesticated the horse is, he's not part of domestic life; his place remains firmly outside, in the field, the corral, the paddock, or the stable, depending on the part of the country you live in. You go to visit the horse, the horse doesn't visit you. In other cultures -- among the Mongols, for example -- horsemen sleep with their horses, for warmth, one presumes, but that has never been the Anglo-Saxon way, even among old-time cowboys. However fond the rider may be of his mount, it's our custom to bed down at some distance from it. Little girls may fantasize about sleeping with their ponies, but not many actually do it, which is just as well, since horses of all sizes are restless sleepers, and very likely to kick out when disturbed. In any case, horses do most of their sleeping standing up.

So the horse occupies a peculiar and privileged position, not quite a pet, no longer a working animal, rooted, for many people, in the past, but flourishing in the present, admired even by people who don't ride, and apt not only to survive but to thrive almost anywhere.

A few words about my own involvement with horses. I came to horses early in life -- somewhere there is a picture of me on a small, shaggy pony at the age of about six -- but although I learned to ride, living as we did in Hampstead, on the outskirts of London, we never owned a horse.

My father Vincent and his two brothers, Zoltan, a few years older, and Alexander, the eldest, had grown up in rural Hungary before the invention of the motor car, so horses were neither a mystery to them nor an enthusiasm. Their father, Henry, a man with a fierce military bearing and mustache but with curiously melancholy eyes, had been a cavalry sergeant during his military service before he became the over-seer of the immense estate of the Salgo family on the Hungarian puszta, or plains, and certainly he rode a horse to go about his job. Of his children, neither Alex nor my father rode as adults, though both had been on horses as children, if only to take them back and forth from the fields to the stable. When World War I began, however, my uncle Zoltan was called up for military service and actually became a lieutenant in a cavalry regiment in the Austro-Hungarian Army, unusual for a Jew in those days, particularly in the army whose most famous veteran was the title character in Jaroslav Hasek's classic novel The Good Soldier Svejk. Zoli saw combat on the Galician front and was wounded, gassed, and taken prisoner by the Russians. He rode in at least one cavalry charge, and perhaps as a result, in later years he showed no desire to mount a horse again. Uncle Alex's eyes were bad enough to exempt him from military service. My father was conscripted and sent to an infantry regiment, where the colonel soon discovered both his ineptitude as a soldier and his talent as a painter and promoted him to sergeant, giving my father a small, cozy cottage as a studio, where he busied himself painting portraits of the colonel, the colonel's wife, the colonel's daughters, and the colonel's dog (a dachshund), as well as nudes of the colonel's mistress, until the war was over and he could return to art school. When he was not painting, he looked after the colonel's horse, and in later life, whenever he saw a horse in the street, he would stop, pet it, and feed it one of the lumps of sugar that he took from restaurants and kept in his pocket for just that purpose. He remained distantly fond of horses, if only because they reminded him of his youth -- the colonel's horse, he liked to say, had given him a good deal less trouble than the colonel's wife or mistress -- but not so fond as to explain my own involvement with horses over the years.

On my mother's side of the family, which was staunchly English, it's harder to say for sure what part horses played. My great-grandfather was always described rather grandly by his daughters -- Annie, my grandmother, and her more formidable older sister Maud-Mary -- as "having owned horses all his life," which was true enough, since he had a horse-drawn cart pulled by a succession of bony old nags, with which he made his way daily around the Liverpool streets, crying out, "Coal, coal!" to housewives.

My maternal grandfather, Octavius Musgrove, must have been interested in riding at one time ...

Horse People
Scenes from the Riding Life
. Copyright © by Michael Korda. Reprinted by permission of HarperCollins Publishers, Inc. All rights reserved. Available now wherever books are sold.

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