![]() ![]() ![]() Jarret proves to be as talented as his father. Warfield promises Harry Lewis, a talented Black trainer, an interest in the racehorse in lieu of a year’s wages - an exciting prospect, since Lewis hopes to use any future winnings to buy the freedom of his son Jarret, whom Warfield has enslaved. The action then shifts to 1850, to the day Lexington is born on the Kentucky farm of the physician Elisha Warfield. Weeks later, when the couple begin to fall in love, Theo will wonder how to answer the question of how they met, since “being tacitly accused of bike theft wasn’t exactly a meet cute.” The encounter is awkward: Theo, who is Black, recognizes Jess as the white woman who had earlier confronted him when she thought he was stealing her bike. ![]() Theo takes the artwork to the Smithsonian for evaluation and is introduced to Jess, who is restoring the skeleton of the same horse for an exhibit. ![]() The novel opens in Washington, DC, where art historian Theo is rescuing a painting of Lexington, one of America’s most renowned racehorses, from his neighbor’s trash. Yet readers who appreciate rigorous historical research and polished storytelling should certainly stay the course. A story of present-day interracial romance woven together with a history of thoroughbred racing in the antebellum South, Horse, a new novel by Geraldine Brooks ’83JRN, is no safe bet. ![]()
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