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    Wild Horse Country: The History, Myth, and Future of the Mustang

    Wild Horse Country: The History, Myth, and Future of the Mustang

    by David Philipps


    eBook

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      ISBN-13: 9780393635300
    • Publisher: Norton, W. W. & Company, Inc.
    • Publication date: 10/10/2017
    • Sold by: Barnes & Noble
    • Format: eBook
    • Pages: 336
    • Sales rank: 327,469
    • File size: 12 MB
    • Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.

    David Philipps is a Pulitzer Prize–winning national reporter for the New York Times. He is the author of Lethal Warriors and a graduate of the Columbia School of Journalism. He lives in Colorado with his family.

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    A Pulitzer Prize–winning reporter’s history of wild horses in America—and an eye-opening story of their treatment in our own time.

    The wild horse is so ingrained in the American imagination that even those who have never seen one know what it stands for: fierce independence, unbridled freedom, the bedrock ideals of the nation. From car ads to high school mascots, the wild horse—popularly known as the mustang—is the enduring icon of America. But in modern times it has become entangled in controversy and bureaucracy, and now its future is in question. In Wild Horse Country, New York Times reporter David Philipps traces the rich history of wild horses in America and investigates the shocking dilemma they face in our own time.

    Here is the grand story of the horse: from its prehistoric debut in North America to its reintroduction by Spanish conquistadors and its spread through the epic battles between native tribes and settlers during the days of the Wild West.

    Philipps explores how wild horses became so central to America’s sense of itself, and he delves into the hold that wild horses have had on the American imagination from the early explorers to the best-selling novels of Zane Grey to Hollywood Westerns.

    Traveling through remote parts of the American West, Philipps also reveals the wild horse’s current crisis, with tens of thousands of horses being held in captivity by the federal government, and free horses caught between the clashing ideals of ranchers, animal rights activists, scientists, and government officials.

    Wild Horse Country is a powerful blend of history and contemporary reporting that vividly reveals the majesty and plight of an American icon, while pointing a way forward that will preserve this icon for future generations.

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    Publishers Weekly
    07/17/2017
    Pulitzer Prize–winning reporter Philipps (Lethal Warriors) investigates the history and current status of America’s wild-horse herds, beginning in the 16th century with the mustang’s introduction into the Americas by the Spanish conquistadors and ending with a rumination on how best to humanely limit the ever-expanding mustang population today. Along the way, Philipps examines the mustang’s near extinction due to the rise of meat factories at the turn of the 20th century and a remarkably successful political movement organized by Velma Johnson (aka Wild Horse Annie), who embarked on a campaign that led to the passage of federal protections for mustangs. There is something to learn from the erudite Philipps on almost every page as he describes the role of the mustang in the myth of the West, the evolution of prehistoric horses, and many other relevant subjects with equal facility. Philipps also ably analyzes the complex forces at play in the ongoing fight between conservationists working to protect free-range mustangs, ranchers protective of their grazing rights, and the Bureau of Land Management, which is charged with maintaining mustang herds. If there is a villain in his tale, it is the BLM, depicted as an ineffective bureaucracy at best and at worst as a corrupt entity complicit in the illegal selling of mustangs to rendering factories. Philipps’s strengths are on full display in this thoughtful, balanced, and informative work. Illus. (Oct.)
    Dan Egan
    A gripping, myth-busting biography of the mustang, one of the most charismatic characters in the epic story of the American West, and a whip-smart argument for how to keep what’s left of its wilderness as wild as possible.
    Bruce Jacobs - Shelf Awareness
    Colorful, well-researched and well-reasoned.
    Booklist
    Philipps . . . brings a journalist’s keen eye for detail and balanced storytelling to this complicated history.
    Gerard Mulholland
    Thoughtful and thought-provoking. . . . [A] fine journalistic account.
    Howard Jerome
    Insightful [and] even-handed.
    Library Journal
    ★ 09/15/2017
    Philipps, a New York Times Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter and the author of Lethal Warriors, chronicles the history of wild horses, known as mustangs, in the United States from their earliest prehistory to their current standing in a country that both manages and mismanages their survival. This history also tells of their use during the era of Spanish conquistadors, their place in a Westward-expanding nation, and even their utilization as dog food. Philipps describes mustangs as, "the hoofed version of Jeffersonian Democracy," and how they embody American concepts of freedom and wildness. Using contemporary and historical primary and secondary sources as well as on-site investigative reporting, the author exposes government efforts to control wild horse populations via science and by warehousing thousands of animals each year; a costly and gruesome story. Readers might find tactics by the Bureau of Land Management, the agency responsible for managing the herds, shocking and the fate of the horses heart-wrenching. VERDICT This is a story that needs to be told, especially in today's political climate and the debate over preservation of nature. Libraries with environmental history collections will want to add this to their shelves.—Patricia Ann Owens, formerly at Illinois Eastern Community Coll., Mt. Carmel
    Kirkus Reviews
    2017-08-07
    A gimlet-eyed look at the place of the wild horse in the landscape of the American West and at the poor legacy of human relations with that spirited animal.If you do not live in the mountain West, you might not know that a fierce controversy rages over wild horses, or mustangs, on public lands and whether they should be removed and, in some cases, exterminated. Ranchers, as Colorado-based New York Times reporter Philipps (Lethal Warriors: When the New Band of Brothers Came Home, 2010) writes, are vocal in their hatred of both the federal agencies in charge of those lands and of the wild horses: "Mention mustangs in almost any small-town bar or café and prepare for an earful." Lifting the argument a notch or two above where it usually rests, the author examines the natural history of these wild creatures—feral, their ancestors long-ago domesticated horses that escaped and formed their own herds—writing that while they may look a little scruffy, they are prized for intelligence and stamina: "The desert prunes any deficiencies." Traveling through mustang country, Philipps considers a long history of mismanagement on the part of the federal government, based on rather haphazard roundups for most of the last half-century, with halfhearted efforts at adoption. When left to their own devices, ranchers have followed a program of trapping wild horses, selecting the best to incorporate into their herds, and then—well, one Nevada rancher tells the author, "we would chicken feed whatever nobody wanted." Philipps proposes that we recognize the mustang, as with other wild species, as an animal that has a people problem, not the other way around, adding that some of the old saws about mustangs are inaccurate: it's not true, for instance, that they lack natural predators, since mountain lions are vigorous in culling the herd. A fine, readable work of advocacy journalism, of a piece with Marc Reisner's Cadillac Desert, that deserves to inform discussion about the mustang issue as it plays out in courts and in Congress.

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