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Derby Magic by Jim Bolus — book cover

Derby Magic

by Jim Bolus
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Overview

The emotion of the 1986 Kentucky Derby, which was magic for the “Sunshine Boys,” Charlie Whittingham and Willie Shoemaker.

Synopsis

In his fifth book on the Derby with Pelican, Jim Bolus, renowned "Derbyologist", captures the magic of the Kentucky Derby in a series of insightful essays.

Readers will feel the emotion of the 1986 Kentucky Derby, which was magic for the "Sunshine Boys", Charlie Whittingham and Willie Shoemaker. They teamed together with a rangy colt named Ferdinand to become the oldest trainer and jockey, at seventy-three and fifty-four, respectively, to triumph in this classic race.

The magic also runs through "Clyde Van Dusen Was a 'Mud-Runnin' Fool'", "Horses Have Their Own Personalities", "Assault: The Little Horse with the Heart of a Giant", and other stories.

Publishers Weekly

Horses, like humans, have type A and type B personalities, according to Bolus, curator of the Kentucky Derby Museum, in his fifth book on America's best-known Thoroughbred race. Here he presents almost two dozen capsule biographies, some of jockeys, some of owners and trainers, but most of horses. Among the mounts and the years of their victories are Assault (1946), clearly Bolus's favorite; Clyde Van Dusen (1929), a son of Man o' War; Gallant Fox (1930); Omaha (1935), who would rather bite a horse that bumped him than win a race; Black Gold (1924), whom Bolus calls "the king of derby winners"; and Seattle Slew (1977), never defeated until after he won the Triple Crown. The most interesting jockey profiled here is African American Isaac Murphy, "arguably the best jockey of [the 19th] century, black or white." "Honest Ike," so called because he was considered incorruptible at a time when many riders were not, won at Churchill Downs three times before his death in 1896. Other absorbing chapters trace the history of shipping horses by air and equine personalities from the lovable Buckpasser to the vicious Nevele Pride. Disappointingly, among the dozens of photos there are no action shots. A delight for racing fans. (June)

About the Author, Jim Bolus

The late Jim Bolus, who attended his thirtieth Kentucky Derby in 1996, hadn't missed the race in more than twenty years. Dubbed a "Doctor of Derbyology" by one newspaper reporter, Bolus also wrote Derby Fever, Remembering the Derby, Kentucky Derby Stories, and Derby Magic, all published by Pelican.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

Horses, like humans, have type A and type B personalities, according to Bolus, curator of the Kentucky Derby Museum, in his fifth book on America's best-known Thoroughbred race. Here he presents almost two dozen capsule biographies, some of jockeys, some of owners and trainers, but most of horses. Among the mounts and the years of their victories are Assault (1946), clearly Bolus's favorite; Clyde Van Dusen (1929), a son of Man o' War; Gallant Fox (1930); Omaha (1935), who would rather bite a horse that bumped him than win a race; Black Gold (1924), whom Bolus calls "the king of derby winners"; and Seattle Slew (1977), never defeated until after he won the Triple Crown. The most interesting jockey profiled here is African American Isaac Murphy, "arguably the best jockey of [the 19th] century, black or white." "Honest Ike," so called because he was considered incorruptible at a time when many riders were not, won at Churchill Downs three times before his death in 1896. Other absorbing chapters trace the history of shipping horses by air and equine personalities from the lovable Buckpasser to the vicious Nevele Pride. Disappointingly, among the dozens of photos there are no action shots. A delight for racing fans. (June)

Book Details

Published
October 1, 1998
Publisher
Pelican Publishing Company, Incorporated
Pages
256
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9781565544666

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