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Barbaro, Beyond Brokennessby Lyn LifshinFrom Texas Review Press Available from Amazon or phone 1-800-826-8911 "Barbaro
proved to be the ultimate hero he died trying. This book of poems
provides a fitting and lyrical tribute to the hero." "No one has written about race horses as beautifully and evocatively
as Lyn Lifshin has done in this book on the tragic career of Barbaro and
in her paean to the immortal Ruffian, The Licorice Daughter: My Year
With Ruffian. Lifshin has been described by one reviewer as "frighteningly
prolific," but, though that is an accurate description to be sure,
her prolificacy does not in the least diminish the profundity and charming
accessibility of her poems. Lifshin's observations of the unexpected rise
and fall of Barbaro are acute and charged with empathy. These poems imbue
the memory of Barbaro with a heroism that is exquisite and rare, a quality
that is sorely lacking in this modern age of prosaic anxiety and despair."
"I loved this book! Lyn Lifshin's Barbaro: Beyond Brokenness
tells the story of that gallant and tragic champion in words and phrases
as soft as a child's tears. Lyn's love for the horse that touched so many
so deeply is clear. Immersing oneself in her deft, loving writing is to
once again be reminded why we are all stirred by the heart of a thoroughbred.
The book made this reader smile, weep and remember the many wonderful
aspects of Barbaro's life. Reading Barbaro: Beyond Brokenness is
to once again be reminded of his greatness and his indomitable spirit,
how much he touched us, and why we all regret that he wasn't able to complete
his journey." Lifshin has managed to capture the grandeur and heartbreak of this horse,
the equine soul in flight Beautiful! Just like his name, Barbaro.
For anyone who was moved by the gallant and heartbreaking saga of Barbaro,
Lyn Lifshin's Beyond Brokeness is full of such lyricism, full of such light splintering
into every color real and imaginedto me your best work yet. The
images are rich, bursting with life, even at the last. With The Licorice
Daughter you were just getting warmed up for your foray into poetry
about race horses. With this book you have hit your stride. The difference
I think is that you lived in the same time as Barbaro, his world, knew
him intimately and really while he lived, couldn't start your day without
him. You were always in the company of people who were the sameyou,
and they, saw him break, felt that terrible wrench when the jockey pulled
him up. You were there, always with him. That was the way it was with
Ruffian, and I think that is what makes the difference. No matter, they
are both wonderful volumes and I so glad to have them both. For your summer reading listJul 9th, 2009 Lyn's back with another book - Barbaro: Beyond Brokenness (Texas Review Press, $16.95). It's another enchanting read. From the colt's first steps to his final ones, the journey of the 2006 Kentucky Derby winner's fatal mistep in the Preakness is a touching read. Lyn lives in Vienna so help a Washington writer. Visit her website Lynlifshin.com or get the book from local bookstores or amazon.com. Disclosure: I'm helping Lyn publicize the book because fellow racing writers need all the help they can get. But I wouldn't do it if it wasn't a good book. Posted on http://thericksniderreport.com/ Review by Belinda Subraman Barbaro’s birthdate, April 29, 2003 at Springmint Farm near Nicholasville, Kentucky and his death at New Bolton Center in Kennett Square, Pennsylvania, January 29, 2007 are already part of myth. Review by Hugh Fox The amazing thing about this book is the way Lifshin transforms a horse named Barbaro into a human being. By the time you get through reading the book, you are totally inside her psyche, feeling precisely the way she did about the championship abilities of Barbaro, his personality and his sad death. Review by Natalie Lobe In each of nearly 150 poems about the famed racehorse, Barbaro, Lyn Lifshin brings a new slant, a separate nuance, another dimension. The total effect is overwhelming. This collection of poems reaches the reader at many levels: namely the story itself, the impact of beauty on our lives and the universality of grief.
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Last Updated: {date June 23, 2010 } |