Lexington: The Extraordinary Life and Turbulent Times of America's Legendary Racehorse
4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars | 167 ratings
Price: 17.72
Last update: 06-30-2024
Top reviews from the United States
Roxanne Coccia
5.0 out of 5 stars
Beautifully written
Reviewed in the United States on September 24, 2023
This was a fantastic read that I bought kind of on a whim. I'm not a Thoroughbred afficando being a gaited horse lover. I had heard of Lexington however I knew only a miniscule amount compared to what I learned from this fascinating superbly written book. This is a historical account of an extraordinary horse and I can only wonder what he could have done on our modern race tracks. The author put in a mind boggling amount of research to write this book and it's not dry reading. It keeps you engaged and wanting to keep reading far past when you should have gone to bed! I can't imagine writing this book. Congratulations on a job well done. If you are a student of the horse no matter your breed preference this book is worth your while to read.
Robin G
5.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent read!
Reviewed in the United States on March 13, 2024
This was not just a book about an amazing racehorse...it was about a very turbulent time in American history and chronicles the times, the people, the events and the horses in and around the Civil War. The book is masterfully researched, and I would recommend it highly as a great read, an addition to a personal library or a gift! I could not put the book down and learned many things that were not covered in school growing up. The author created a masterpiece!
SeattleBookMama
4.0 out of 5 stars
Wickens is Off and Running!
Reviewed in the United States on October 5, 2023
Kim Wickens’s book Lexington tells the story, not only of one immensely famous, popular race horse, but of horse racing in general during a bygone era in the U.S. My thanks go to Net Galley and Random House Ballantine for the review copy. This book is for sale now.
From 1780 to 1860, horse racing was the most popular spectator sport in the United States, and almost a religion in the South. Great fortunes rose and fell with the purchase, training, performing, and procreating of prize horses, and Lexington was the greatest of them all. Kim Wickens has done an astounding amount of research. This is probably the best documented work on equestrian history on the market today. If you love horses, and especially if you love horse racing, then this book is for you.
This reviewer knows little about either subject; I read it because it was different from most history books I’ve seen. My particular interest is the American Civil War; the synopsis mentioned General Grant and Abraham Lincoln, and I was all in. One of Lexington’s progenies was gifted to Grant by a supporter during the war, and he prized it greatly. The horse, Cincinnati, carried its new owner into at least three major battles. Grant allowed no one else to ride it, except, on a single occasion, President Abraham Lincoln.
Sadly for me, that’s about all we see of Lincoln, Grant, or the Union Army. It’s done in about four pages, which left me with 412 other pages. There are additional aspects here that are of interest to me, in particular the role of Lexington and his descendants in the crime spree by a bushwhacker named Sue Mundy, a name the man took on in order to throw lawmen off his trail. In fact, I found the second half of this meaty story to be much more interesting than the first half. Of course, although I like horses well enough from a distance, I have never been a rider or had any active interest in them. I am a city dweller, urban to my bones. For horse lovers, perhaps the first half will be as interesting or even more so.
One thing that I must mention has to do with the difficult material. This is nonfiction, and sometimes Lexington and other horses were mistreated by those responsible for their care. Whereas some race horse owners genuinely loved their steeds, ultimately they were investments. What to do with a horse, whether to race it or rest it, keep it or sell it, was governed mostly by the bottom line. Doubtless they would be appalled, were they alive today, to see the vast amount of coddling and spoiling we in the twenty-first century devote to our various fur babies. If you were to make a Venn diagram between us, about the only item that would occupy the shared bubble in the middle would be that we all own animals. That’s it. Whereas there is never any gratuitous description of the violence and other cruelties visited on the horses Wickens discusses, it’s in there, and if you can’t stand it, don’t read it.
I have rated Lexington four stars for a general readership, but for those with a strong, particular interest in horses, racing, and the history of both, this is most likely a five star read. Wickens is off and running!
From 1780 to 1860, horse racing was the most popular spectator sport in the United States, and almost a religion in the South. Great fortunes rose and fell with the purchase, training, performing, and procreating of prize horses, and Lexington was the greatest of them all. Kim Wickens has done an astounding amount of research. This is probably the best documented work on equestrian history on the market today. If you love horses, and especially if you love horse racing, then this book is for you.
This reviewer knows little about either subject; I read it because it was different from most history books I’ve seen. My particular interest is the American Civil War; the synopsis mentioned General Grant and Abraham Lincoln, and I was all in. One of Lexington’s progenies was gifted to Grant by a supporter during the war, and he prized it greatly. The horse, Cincinnati, carried its new owner into at least three major battles. Grant allowed no one else to ride it, except, on a single occasion, President Abraham Lincoln.
Sadly for me, that’s about all we see of Lincoln, Grant, or the Union Army. It’s done in about four pages, which left me with 412 other pages. There are additional aspects here that are of interest to me, in particular the role of Lexington and his descendants in the crime spree by a bushwhacker named Sue Mundy, a name the man took on in order to throw lawmen off his trail. In fact, I found the second half of this meaty story to be much more interesting than the first half. Of course, although I like horses well enough from a distance, I have never been a rider or had any active interest in them. I am a city dweller, urban to my bones. For horse lovers, perhaps the first half will be as interesting or even more so.
One thing that I must mention has to do with the difficult material. This is nonfiction, and sometimes Lexington and other horses were mistreated by those responsible for their care. Whereas some race horse owners genuinely loved their steeds, ultimately they were investments. What to do with a horse, whether to race it or rest it, keep it or sell it, was governed mostly by the bottom line. Doubtless they would be appalled, were they alive today, to see the vast amount of coddling and spoiling we in the twenty-first century devote to our various fur babies. If you were to make a Venn diagram between us, about the only item that would occupy the shared bubble in the middle would be that we all own animals. That’s it. Whereas there is never any gratuitous description of the violence and other cruelties visited on the horses Wickens discusses, it’s in there, and if you can’t stand it, don’t read it.
I have rated Lexington four stars for a general readership, but for those with a strong, particular interest in horses, racing, and the history of both, this is most likely a five star read. Wickens is off and running!
KyRagtop Girl
5.0 out of 5 stars
Absolute delight to read!
Reviewed in the United States on June 15, 2024
I collect “horse” books. I have all my life. When I saw this one, I knew I had to have it. I waited until I was camping at the Kentucky Horse Park to read it. It seems like the atmosphere of reading under a tree that once shaded race horses makes a story about race horses that much more endearing.
I have always been a lover of race horse stories. I was one of those crazy horse girls who collected everything I could with a horse one it until I could get one of my own. I followed the races during the age of Secretariat, Seattle Skew, Affirmed, and Alydar.
The story of Lexington provides a prequel to the end stories of our favorite racers. I was always a “Team Man O’ War” girl and as I read about Lexington, it reminded me so much of Big Red that there must be a connection. It was delightful to discover that Man O’ War’s “bottom” came from Lexington.
I was also equally delighted to realize that Lexington finally came home in the last couple of years to the Bluegrass and is currently at the Kentucky horse park. If I had realized that he was just a few yards from me, I would’ve gladly paid the entry fee just to go see him. I guess I will have to make another trip just for that.
If you were ever a person who enjoyed the history of thoroughbred horse racing or the history of Kentucky, this book is a wonderful read, and even if you are not a horse fan, I think you will enjoy the rich history that is researched and compiled in this book. My next trip to Lexington will definitely have a different atmosphere knowing this part of history.
I have always been a lover of race horse stories. I was one of those crazy horse girls who collected everything I could with a horse one it until I could get one of my own. I followed the races during the age of Secretariat, Seattle Skew, Affirmed, and Alydar.
The story of Lexington provides a prequel to the end stories of our favorite racers. I was always a “Team Man O’ War” girl and as I read about Lexington, it reminded me so much of Big Red that there must be a connection. It was delightful to discover that Man O’ War’s “bottom” came from Lexington.
I was also equally delighted to realize that Lexington finally came home in the last couple of years to the Bluegrass and is currently at the Kentucky horse park. If I had realized that he was just a few yards from me, I would’ve gladly paid the entry fee just to go see him. I guess I will have to make another trip just for that.
If you were ever a person who enjoyed the history of thoroughbred horse racing or the history of Kentucky, this book is a wonderful read, and even if you are not a horse fan, I think you will enjoy the rich history that is researched and compiled in this book. My next trip to Lexington will definitely have a different atmosphere knowing this part of history.
Thelonious
5.0 out of 5 stars
Well written, well researched
Reviewed in the United States on April 15, 2024
Real history that reads like a novel.