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3.0 out of 5 stars
Good,
By Cosmoetica "cosmoeticadotcom" (New York, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Ringers & Rascals: The True Story of Racing's Greatest Con Artists (Paperback)
What makes Ringers & Rascals succeed where many other books that detail crimes like this fail is that Ashforth never delves into cheap moralizing. The guys who were racing scamsters were crooks and swindlers, but they were not mass murderers. Yes, they did illegal things, but, in the grand scheme of things, their crimes pale in comparison to the hundreds of crimes committed daily in corporate America, and Ashforth realizes this, and laments the fact that computer chip injections have made horse swindling all the harder in this day and age. Then again, while lip tattooing succeeded for a few decades, it too was overcome by the swindlers, and Ashforth is not shy in hoping that they one day succeed and brings some `color' back into the `Sport Of Kings', for he ends his book this way:Tattoos and brands, passports and blood testing, microchips and DNA, as well as much improved security and stewarding, have tipped the scales powerfully against ringers. Yet skullduggery's strange appeal persists. I confess, although not as often as Barrie, that part of me hopes that today, at a racecourse somewhere.... Ringers & Rascals is not the sort of book one can nor should hold to one's bosom for its powerful ideas nor poesy, but it is a good way to kill off an afternoon when your mind is in need of a light read. And that's better than most books published nowadays can claim. |
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Ringers & Rascals: The True Story of Racing's Greatest Con Artists by David Ashforth (Paperback - May 15, 2004)
Used & New from: $0.45
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