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Book cover of One Good Horse
Rural Sociology - General & Miscellaneous, Frontier & Pioneer Life - Western United States, Montana - State & Local History, Horse Riding & Training

One Good Horse

by Tom Groneberg
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Overview

Since moving west over a decade ago, Tom Groneberg has worked with horses as a trail guide, as a ranch hand, and as the manager of his own ranch in Montana, but he has never owned a really good horse. Until, on an autumn night, in a warm barn under a blanket of snow, Blue is born. Soon, he will belong to Tom Groneberg. "If I had a good horse," writes Tom, "I could give it my life. I could ride it for years. We could grow old together." So begins this unique American love story about a man and his horse.

In straightforward, poetic prose, Tom Groneberg chronicles the early successes and failures of trying to train Blue, earning the animal's trust, and saddling him for the first time. The experience is challenging, but ultimately rewarding for Tom. Through his relationship with the animal, he develops a deeper understanding of the land and his community, and of himself -- as a man, and as a husband and father. In a world in which horses are fast becoming nothing more than warm-blooded lawn ornaments, Tom still believes these animals are important in human lives.

At its heart, One Good Horse is about the power of hope, the simple story of a horse and the way people connect with nature and with each other across the generations.

Synopsis

Since moving west over a decade ago, Tom Groneberg has worked with horses as a trail guide, as a ranch hand, and as the manager of his own ranch in Montana, but he has never owned a really good horse. Until, on an autumn night, in a warm barn under a blanket of snow, Blue is born. Soon, he will belong to Tom Groneberg. "If I had a good horse," writes Tom, "I could give it my life. I could ride it for years. We could grow old together." So begins this unique American love story about a man and his horse.

In straightforward, poetic prose, Tom Groneberg chronicles the early successes and failures of trying to train Blue, earning the animal's trust, and saddling him for the first time. The experience is challenging, but ultimately rewarding for Tom. Through his relationship with the animal, he develops a deeper understanding of the land and his community, and of himself -- as a man, and as a husband and father. In a world in which horses are fast becoming nothing more than warm-blooded lawn ornaments, Tom still believes these animals are important in human lives.

At its heart, One Good Horse is about the power of hope, the simple story of a horse and the way people connect with nature and with each other across the generations.

Publishers Weekly

This narrative of self-discovery encompassing hope, struggle, loss and redemption picks up from Groneberg's last book, The Secret Life of C. This new memoir finds him still in Montana, working various ranch jobs to support his growing family. After a difficult year tending to his newborn twin sons, one of whom has Down syndrome, Groneberg decides to "regain" that year by pursuing one of his cowboy dreams: buying and training a horse. This book slowly unfolds through three interlaced narratives: Groneberg's life with and without his spunky new colt, Blue; a depiction of Blue's life from birth to when he joins his new owner; and the story of Teddy Blue Albott, a cowpuncher whose rugged Montana life in the late 19th and early 20th centuries stands in contrast to Groneberg's tale. While it takes a few chapters for Groneberg to successfully blend his narratives, overall he succeeds in exploring a deep sense of personal understanding and revelation, and he ultimately accepts that the attempt to be a good father is the most important thing in his life: "it is all that I am. It is all that I need to be." (Feb.) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.

About the Author, Tom Groneberg

Before getting trapped on the corporate fast track, Tom Groneberg decided to seek out his own frontier, and became a real-life cowboy on a Montana ranch. His account of the experience, The Secret Life of Cowboys was roped as a Barnes & Noble Discover Great New Writers pick.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly

This narrative of self-discovery encompassing hope, struggle, loss and redemption picks up from Groneberg's last book, The Secret Life of C. This new memoir finds him still in Montana, working various ranch jobs to support his growing family. After a difficult year tending to his newborn twin sons, one of whom has Down syndrome, Groneberg decides to "regain" that year by pursuing one of his cowboy dreams: buying and training a horse. This book slowly unfolds through three interlaced narratives: Groneberg's life with and without his spunky new colt, Blue; a depiction of Blue's life from birth to when he joins his new owner; and the story of Teddy Blue Albott, a cowpuncher whose rugged Montana life in the late 19th and early 20th centuries stands in contrast to Groneberg's tale. While it takes a few chapters for Groneberg to successfully blend his narratives, overall he succeeds in exploring a deep sense of personal understanding and revelation, and he ultimately accepts that the attempt to be a good father is the most important thing in his life: "it is all that I am. It is all that I need to be." (Feb.) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

In his new book, Groneberg (contributor, Men's Journal, Big Sky Journal, and Sports Afield; The Secret Lives of Cowboys) declares, "If I had a good horse, I could give it my life. I could ride it for years. We could grow old together." If that statement (and the book's title) leads you to expect a story of Groneberg's close relationship with an exceptional horse, you're in for a disappointment. True, Groneberg recounts how he finds a colt, buys it, and proceeds to train it himself (a first for him). The colt, he tells us, is easy to break and has good conformation. But that's about all we learn about this animal. Instead, we're given a distracting account of a cowboy from another era and brief descriptions of Groneberg's wife and children and of the people he works with. The connection among the various themes in the book is, alas, tenuous. Readers interested in contemporary cowboys and horses would be better served by books such as Mark Spragg's Where Rivers Change Direction and Thomas McGuane's Some Horses: Essays.-Patsy E. Gray, Huntsville P.L., AL Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

Montana-based writer Groneberg (The Secret Life of Cowboys, not reviewed) combines a memoir about acquiring a colt after one of his twin sons is diagnosed with Down syndrome with the story of a 19th-century cowboy. The ranch hand/author and his pregnant wife, Jennifer, were stunned but happy to learn that she was expecting twins. Their world turned upside down, though, when the babies arrived seven weeks prematurely and with health problems: Bennett had an umbilical hernia, and Avery, far more seriously, was afflicted with Down syndrome. As the parents struggled with altered expectations, Groneberg turned to a fantasy he'd had for a long time, of breaking and training a colt. In between midnight feedings, diaper changes and hospital visits, he scanned the paper for horseflesh. An ad caught his eye, and he found himself the owner of a quiet, dark-brown colt. Groneberg boarded Blue, as he named the animal, at a friend's barn, and took his training very slowly: Weeks passed before he placed a saddle pad on Blue's back, much less the saddle itself. After he finally rode Blue, he toyed with the idea of turning the colt loose on Wild Horse Island, former Flathead Indian land and failed resort for the wealthy. Meanwhile, Groneberg attended physical therapy with little Avery, whom he came to recognize as a hero for the simple reason that Avery never gave up, even when the exercises were horribly difficult. These personal chapters alternate rather jarringly with the history of Teddy Blue, who began running cattle as a ten-year-old boy, had a chance meeting with Billy the Kid, and in the 1880s hired on with the DHS ranch near the Musselshell, where he met his future wife and gave up his roaminglife. For a memoir ostensibly about finding one good colt, the book contains surprisingly little about Blue or about the art of breaking horses. Heartfelt, but very little giddyup and go.

Book Details

Published
September 1, 2008
Publisher
Simon & Schuster Adult Publishing Group
Pages
288
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780743265188

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