

This is Amy Mills of Friends of the Park City Library.Geraldine Brooks' work 'March' opens with the main character John March writing a letter to his wife while he is fighting a battle as a chaplain of the union army. “Horse” is available from the Park City and Summit County libraries. All is brought together by Geraldine Brooks’ fine prose and attention to physical and psychological detail. The intersecting story lines, 170 years apart, add depth and suspense. Unlike the choppy effect of this storytelling style in some books, in this case it flows easily, leading the reader to anticipate various new developments.

The book is written from the perspective of both historical and present-day characters, in alternating chapters. Add to this the richly drawn characters, a nuanced description of daily life in the South, and the intricate workings of a collegial investigation into this small piece of history. It is fine reading to accompany Jarrett as he builds an enduring trust with Lexington over both of their journeys to adulthood. The story line alone isn’t what makes this book compelling. The parallel story of African-born Theo provides a comparison to Jarrett’s experience with injustice. Present day Jess and Theo form an interracial couple who work together to unravel Lexington’s and Jarrett’s 170-year old history. Jarrett was a slave to wealthy horse-racing Southern landowners, but managed, against great odds, to stay with his beloved horse, train him, and protect him from most - though not all - of the cruelty of horse racing in the 1850s. The historical narrative is woven with a present-day discovery of Lexington’s bones by a Smithsonian scientist named Jess, and a discarded painting of Lexington and Jarrett discovered by an art historian named Theo. The novel centers on a legendary real-life thoroughbred racehorse, Lexington, and his devoted young groom, a slave named Jarrett in the 1850s. Acclaimed writer Geraldine Brooks, author of “Caleb’s Crossing,” “March,” and “People of the Book,” has released a new novel on a topic she knows a lot about – horses – set against the backdrop of the antebellum South.
