Horse
How the Horse Has Shaped Civilizations
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- $9.99
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
Full of wisdom, passion and wonder, Horse is the utterly fascinating and enlightening story of horses and humans from the beginning of time to the present.
Ever since the dawn of human history, horses have held a mystical sway over our imagination: we respect and revere them like no other animal. We have conceived of them as both domesticated and free, both belonging to our civilization and to the wild. At first, ours was an encounter of death, as prehistoric humans hunted horses all across the steppes of Asia, and throughout Europe. But they also painted horses full of grace and beauty on the walls of their caves, and gave them a central place in their songs and sacred rituals. Long before the invention of writing and the wheel, horses began to shape the way humans lived.
Drawing on archaeology, biology, art, literature and ethnography, Horse illuminates the relationship between humans and horses throughout history – from Alexander the Great to Genghis Khan, from the Moors in Spain and the knights in France to the great horse cultures of native America. From the Ice Age to the Industrial Age, horses have provided sustenance, transportation, status, companionship and the ability to establish and expand empires. Included are stories of horses at work, at war and at play, both wild horses and famous horses, in paintings, books and movies.
Horse looks at the ancient traditions of horse trading and horse stealing, horse racing and games with horses, and at rodeos and circuses, jumping and dressage. It compares techniques of training and traditions of breeding, from the Persians to the Nez Perce, from Lippizaners to Percherons, and ponders the intelligence of horses, their skill and strength as well as their grace and beauty.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Historian Chamberlin's desire to convince readers that horses are the most significant element in uniting people-"more than paper and printing, more than the telephone and the television"-is hobbled by grandiose claims, overwrought prose and personified horses. The book opens with a brief overview of the evolutionary history of horses from the perspective of a 1930s-era horse named Big Bird who learned of the Bering-Strait crossing from her ancestors and, wearing a bell around her neck, "felt like a milk cow." Regaining readers' trust, then, is not an easy task. Although the book piles on historical equine episodes, it is burdened by statements such as, "Realizing that horses have that space...on which a piece of bone or metal could rest was one of humanity's great discoveries." Instead of arguing for the importance of horses to human history, Chamberlin stakes his book on shakier terrain and fills it with inane vagaries ("Horses are both a walk in the storm and a shelter from it, and they take us closer to the world by taking us further away"). The result may repel even horse-loving readers, though those of the patient variety will find a feedsack's worth of horse trivia in these pages.