|
Horse Tradin' | 
enlarge | Author: Ben K. Green Publisher: Knopf Category: Book
List Price: $26.95 Buy New: $16.00 You Save: $10.95 (41%)
New (22) Used (16) Collectible (2) from $5.67
Rating: 6 reviews Sales Rank: 243983
Media: Hardcover Edition: First Edition Pages: 320 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1 Dimensions (in): 8.5 x 6 x 1.3
ISBN: 039442929X Dewey Decimal Number: 599 EAN: 9780394429298 ASIN: 039442929X
Publication Date: May 12, 1967 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Tell A Friend Add to Wishlist Add to Wedding Registry Add to Baby Registry
| |
| Also Available In:
|
| Similar Items:
|
| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description
Here are the yarns of a true cowboy for those who have in their blood either a touch of larceny, an affection for the Old West, or better yet, both. These twenty tales add up to a true account of Ben K. Green’s experiences around the corrals, livery stables, and wagon yards of the West. Green was a veterinarian who took down his shingle and went into horse trading, in what he imagined would be retirement. No stranger to the saddle, Green claims to have “with these bloodshot eyes and gnarled hands measured over seventy thousand horses.” His tales range from tricks to make an old horse seem young (at least until the poor creature died from the side effects of the scam) to a recipe for making a dapple-gray mule from a bucket of paint and a chicken’s egg. So you want to go into the horse business? You can learn the knavery, skill, salesmanship, and pure con man hokum of horse trading here, in a book every westerner or horse fancier should have on hand.
|
| Customer Reviews: Read 1 more reviews...
Great November 25, 2007 C. Keene (Maine) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Bought this for a friend and they were very pleased. Wonderful to be able to find books that are not in most stores.
Readin' makes good horse sense April 7, 2007 James E. Nickelson (Las Vegas, NV USA) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
I nearly always give my books away---which was what I did with Horse Tradin' over 40 years ago. Now I wanted to give a copy to a grand niece and was not surprised that hard copies were nearly unavailable. I was pleased to see that someone had the good horse sense to publish this Green classic in paperback for contemporary readers. Even so I paid up for a used hardback and just finished rereading the book. It would have been worth twice the price. Probably only people that now live in rural areas can appreciate the freedom and casualness of life before World War ll. You would never know from reading these stories that Ben Green was an educated professional man. He was a self effacing gentleman that may no longer exist. Other reviewers have covered the content of the book and there is no need for my repeating. Do yourself a favor and get and read this book. I only wish that someone would make a movie of 3 or 4 of these wonderful stories. When you read the book you will know what I mean.
Would you Buy a Horse from this Man? May 4, 2005 Smallchief 10 out of 10 found this review helpful
Ben Green's book "Horse Tradin'" will be enjoyed by about anyone from Texas or with an interest in cowboys and horses. Green was born in 1912 and this book tells stories of his horse tradin' experiences as a boy and young man in the late 1920s and 1930s before the automobile made the profession of horse trader obsolete. Green was a bit more than the simple cowboy he portrays in this book. Research into his life tells us that he was educated in Veterinary medicine at Cornell and in England, so he didn't spend all his time trying to make a buck by sharp trades. One suspects that Green, like all good traders, stretches the truth a bit in some of these 20 stories, but there is an air of authenticity and affection for horses and cowboying that is hard to resist. "I rode into Mineral Wells one day on a new dun horse with black mane and tail that weighed about eleven hundred pounds and had a nice way of carrying himself -- a six-year old, stylish enough..." Now that's a description of a man who knows his horses. Green tells of his shenaningans as a trader, and also of the times that he was taken himself -- by a southern gentleman who sells him a blind horse and by an Indian in New Mexico who sold him wild horses tranquilized by "sleepy" grass to make them appear tame. Green makes you long for a time gone by, capturing the feel of a cold Texas morning, the taste of "bachelor's grub" like beans, beef, and potatoes, and the virtues of "hard-twisted, ill-tempered, unbroke Mexican mules." Texans bought this book in vast numbers when it was first published and it deserves to be recalled as an outstanding bit of Western Americana. Smallchief
Great Horse Stories September 12, 2000 5 out of 9 found this review helpful
I read this book many years ago and am glad to see it reissued. Even my non horsey kids enjoyed the stories. It's even worth rereading.
Green Not Hokey June 25, 2000 Randy Schuppan (O'Fallon, MO USA) 13 out of 13 found this review helpful
Whoever said that Green's stories were hokey must be young, and not appreciative of bootstrap operations. Ben Green was a self-made man, sizing up opportunities as an enterprising youngster. He shows determination, he demonstrates decision-making skills, and he always plays within the framework, ever flavored with a fine-tuned sense of humor. In short, he's the sort who made this country great, and what we are woefully short of in today's crop of youngsters. I know; I'm a retired middle school teacher. I'd recommend this book to any of my former students, except most of them don't like to read.
|
|
| Working Dogs | |