Almost a sequel to Monte Walsh.

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[my Goodreads review, 2009]

I’d call this book almost a sequel to Monte Walsh by Jack Schaefer, and I consider Monte Walsh one of the perfect novels. The writing is superb, in that run-on raconteur style that feels like the easy canter of a horse. It’s 1917, and young Martha Leeson leaves home to become an itinerant bronco buster, only she’s a horse whisperer instead and she doesn’t get that far from home, either.

This book works on so many levels, I hardly know where to begin. It’s a book about World War I at home, it’s a book about coming of age, it’s a book about the loss of the American west, it’s about the failed government program to settle the West with farmers, it’s about the American cowboy, only this time she’s a girl. The circle ride is a terrific device for telling not only Martha’s story but the stories of all the ranchers and farmers for whom she is breaking horses, not to mention a look through Gloss’s eyes at the loneliness and beauty of the eastern Oregon landscape.

But mostly this is a story about Martha, a young woman from an abusive home who is so lonely and unsocialized (for lack of a better word) that she literally doesn’t know what people mean when they speak to her. As she breaks the horses, so does the community gentle her into being one of their own.

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Dana View All →

Author and founder of Storyknife.org.

3 Comments Leave a comment

  1. I adore Monte Walsh! That book’s survived every move I’ve made. I’ll give this a try – thanks!

  2. I LOVED this book (Hearts of Horses) and have read it at least twice. When I finished it the first time, I wanted to start over immediately.

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