Stud: Adventures in Breeding

Stud: Adventures in Breeding

by KevinConley (Author)

Synopsis

The most expensive thirty seconds in sports. Every year, on Valentine's Day, the great Thoroughbred farms open their breeding sheds and begin their primary business. For the next one hundred and fifty days, the cries of stallions and the vigorous encouragement of their handlers echo through breeding country, from the gentle hills of Kentucky to the rich valleys of California. Stud takes you into this strange and seductive world. We move from Lexington's Overbrook Farm, where the world's leading sire, Storm Cat, a lightly raced eighteen-year-old, brings in around thirty million dollars a year; to the auction halls, where sheiks and Irish bookies (known more casually as the Doobie Brothers and the Boys) bid millions for Storm Cat's well-bred offspring. We visit Three Chimneys, where the twenty-seven-year-old Triple Crown winner Seattle Slew, a senior citizen by equine standards, makes a rousing return to active duty after spinal surgery, and stroll through Running Horse Farm, on the banks of the Rio Grande, where a nearly unmanageable colt, Devil Begone, has found peace and prosperity servicing desert mares like Patty O'Furniture. Cheap stud, top stud, old stud, wild stud, from the Hall of Fame horse to the harem stallion with his feral herd, Stud looks at intimate acts in idyllic settings (and the billion-dollar business behind them), providing a voyeuristic glimpse of just how human the equine world can be.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 224
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Published: 08 Jul 2002

ISBN 10: 0747560064
ISBN 13: 9780747560067
Book Overview: Published at the height of the flat-racing season A truly international story with international appeal Extensive review and feature coverage

Media Reviews
A voyeuristic glimpse into the billion-dollar business of stud farming.
Author Bio
Kevin Conley is a staff writer at The New Yorker. His writing has appeared in Details, US Weekly, the New York Times Sunday Magazine, and Sports Illustrated. He lives in New York.