A former Chicago Tribune editor and the breeder of Monarchos, the 2001 Kentucky Derby winner, shares his perspective on the unpredictable world of horse breeding in Horse of a Different Color. Squires recounts the story of how he bred his champion and also provides fascinating details about what appears to be a labyrinthine network of veterinarians, breeders, pedigree specialists, and scores of others who play a part in the business of horse breeding. Fast-paced and entertaining, this horse tale is sure to please.
Squires is cheerfully cynical... Provides the sharpest commentary on racing's class conflicts...A refreshingly anti-romantic view of racing.
Like so many of the blueblooded beasts he writes about, Squires' new book is a winner.
This is a book with all the ingredients-a great tale to tell and a gifted writer at the helm.
Squires writes...with clear affection, proving that even a crusty, hard-eyed newspaperman can have a soft heart.
Squires has written a superb book that provides the ultimate insider's view of big-time racing.
picks up steam as it nears the finish line...you can't stop rushing ahead to see how it turns out.
[Squires]...defied the conventions, took the risks and beat the odds is told in high good humor in ["Horse"].
a funny, occasionally biting tour of the thoroughbred industry... a rollicking primer for the layman...The book's greatest strength is Squires' voice.
offers insight into the strange world of thoroughbred breeding and racing...an entertaining book.
The breeder of the 2001 Kentucky Derby winner, Squires was previously the editor of the Chicago Tribune, whose staff won seven Pulitzers in eight years. But when he was terminated in a management shake-up, he decided to take his horse hobby to the next level. For 20 years his avocation had been raising reining horses, cutting horses, and jumpers. When he made breeding thoroughbred racehorses his second career, no one, himself included, believed that he could make a living at such a risk-filled business. However, using some of the same skills he had used as an editor a willingness to take risks, an ability to analyze a situation by separating fact from emotion, and maintaining a sense of humor Squires was able not only to make a living at breeding racehorses but to breed a horse whose speed in the Kentucky Derby was second only to Secretariat's. His story of this success is fast paced and fun to read. It will appeal not only to horseracing fans but also to people making midlife career changes. Readers who liked Laura Hillenbrand's Seabiscuit and Joe Drape's Race for the Triple Crown will appreciate this book. Recommended for public libraries and libraries with racing collections. Patsy E. Gray, Huntsville P.L., AL Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.
Former editor of the sets up shop in Kentucky to breed horses and is hailed as a genius for breeding Monarchos, the gray colt that went on to win the Kentucky Derby in 2001. Squires's humorous account of his travails and successes as a novice horse- breeder is an entertaining introduction into the world of an eccentric subculture with international ties. Sixteen pages of b&w photographs. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)
Former Chicago Tribune editor Squires (The Secrets of the Hopewell Box, 1996, etc.), a horse breeder since 1990, relates how Lady Luck took a shine to his Two Bucks Farm and gave him a Kentucky Derby winner. Of the 30,000 thoroughbred foals born every year, only 15 to 20 run the big race. Squires, who poured his golden parachute from the Tribune into his Kentucky farm, gives a vivid account of how otherwise sane and sober people can devote their lives to this quixotic endeavor. Starting with his childhood fascination with the type of beauty found in horses and human females, Squires rapidly turns to today's thoroughbred establishment, a world made up of "bloodstock agents, pedigree specialists, sales consignors, farm and racing managers, veterinarians, mating advisers, agents, and consultants of every stripe." From here, he traces the genesis of his Derby winner, Monarchos, offspring of "two castoff descendants of royalty hooking up in a quest for restored respectability." A blizzard of details about horse auctions, foreign ownership, dealers, sales, weanlings, yearlings, and stakes follows, for a time obscuring the trail of Monarchos. The reader who struggles on, however, is rewarded with a thrilling end. The haze of facts and figures resolves into an old-fashioned horse race, with heroes, villains, favorites, and Monarchos, saddled with 10-to-1 odds and a genius of a jockey. Squires has the gift for good, toothsome storytelling; his give-and-take relationship with his wife, "the dominant female," adds a certain savor, and his unabashed admiration of the look of a certain breeder in her tight jeans adds salt. A promising start, muddled middle, and heart-pounding finish.