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A Sunday Horse: Inside the Grand Prix Show Jumping Circuit (Capital Lifestyles)
 
 
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A Sunday Horse: Inside the Grand Prix Show Jumping Circuit (Capital Lifestyles) [Hardcover]

Vicky Moon (Author)
2.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)


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Book Description

Capital Lifestyles March 2004
Following the US national horse show and Grand Prix jumping circuit, Vicky Moon starts in Palm Beach with the Wellington Winter Equestrian Festival, to America's oldest show in Upperville, Virginia, to the Indio Circuit in California, to Long Island for the Hampton Classic, all over the U.S. In a year of high hopes for the US Olympic equestrian team and the contenders for it, meet the riders, trainers, owners, judges, and the personalities such as "The Carrot Man," "The Masseuse," "The Equine Dentist," and the other fascinating characters who follow the horse show circuit.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"'A Sunday Horse' gives a no holds bared insight to the behind the scenes of the humans and the horses." -- Snowden Clarke, trainer and rider, The Plains, Virginia

"'A Sunday Horse' is a book you will not want to miss." -- Leonard Wechsler, Florida Horseman, February/ March 2004, Wellington Magazine – March 2004

"'A Sunday Horse' takes readers behind the scenes in the fascinating world of life on the jumper circuit." -- Lauren Giannini, In & Around Horse Country, April/ May 2004

"...reveals the world of the riders, trainers, owners, horses, judges and personalities of the horse show circuit." -- Publisher’s Weekly, January 26, 2004

"Moon describes this intricate dance of horse competitions, swanky charity fundraisers and celebrities." -- Town-Crier, February 15, 2004

"The book is a must-read." -- Sharon Robb, South Florida Sun-Sentinel, February 22, 2004

About the Author

Vicky Moon has chronicled the lives of the rich, the not-so-rich, the famous, and the not-so-famous for more than twenty years. She has covered her hometown of Middleburg, Virginia's local murders and prominent lives for People Magazine and the Washington Post. She has also written about Middleburg's hunt balls, steeplechase races and parties for Town and Country, Millionaire and Southern Accents magazines and has served as a contributing editor for House and Garden. Ms. Moon is the author of The Official Middleburg Life Cookbook, The Middleburg Mystique: A Peek Inside the Gates of Middleburg, Virginia (Capital, 2001); and Best-dressed Southern Salads (Capital, 2002). Vicky lives in Middleburg, Virginia, with her husband, sportswriter Leonard Shapiro, and her son. Find out more about Vicky at www.vickymoon.com.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 224 pages
  • Publisher: Capital Books; 1 edition (March 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1931868417
  • ISBN-13: 978-1931868419
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6.3 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 2.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,482,121 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

For my new book, 'Equestrian Style: Home Design, Couture, and Collections from the Eclectic to the Elegant' I spent three years developing the idea and one year visiting horse lovers around the United States. From Saratoga Springs, to Ocala, on to Lexington, and beyond, my premise is that Equestrian Style begins with a basic love of horses, and evolves into a lifestyle enveloped in all things equine.
It goes way beyond hanging a hunting print on the dining room wall to actually leaping over stone walls on your favorite hunter. It's not a Hermes scarf, it's a Hermes saddle. Equestrian Style is about the distinctive lifestyle of those who not only love but also practically live with horses.
Such is the case with horseman Snowden Clarke who spent many years riding and training horses in the Piedmont area of Virginia before he pulled up stakes several years ago and headed west. His California living space is part of rustic barn in a very swish area called Pacific Palisades. We actually brought a pony into his room for the photograph.
While in Los Angeles, I met up with Virginia Fout an event planner extraordinaire and her husband Mike Whetstone, a set designer. Their Spanish Tudor home not far from what is known as the Miracle Mile contains many hints of all things horse with a splash of Hollywood thrown in for good measure. (Virginia's brother, race horse trainer Doug Fout and his wife Beth's new kitchen and mud room in The Plains are also featured in the book.)
But back to one of my all time favorite cities'LA, where I met up with Mayan Lopez. This horse crazy little girl has a playroom filled with horse toys, horse books and blue ribbons fit for a Hollywood star. Mayan is the daughter comedian George Lopez and his vivacious wife Ann Lopez. Visiting their home and meeting some of their friends was a highlight. Before departing the left coast, I went to re-visit the Farmers Market at Third and Fairfax, Will Rogers State Park off Sunset Boulevard, and the Santa Monica Pier. (Close your eyes feel the soft breeze and step back an era.)
Back in Virginia, I returned to the sweeping vistas of rolling green pastures and handsome old weathered wooden barns at the Maloney family's Dogpatch Farm near Warrenton. Curious young Thoroughbred horses stick their necks out to explore the passing morning bustle as Sharon Maloney and her brother Kevin Maloney go about their chores. A painting done fifty years ago by the late artist Jean Bowman of a champion show horses Prompt Payment and Substitution owned the late Betty Maloney captures them in the very same pose and now hangs over the mantle. An elegant old silver trophy won by the family is casually propped up in the kitchen.
While I was working on the book, one woman repeatedly urged and nagged me to visit So-and-so's farm. 'They have lots of old horse painting and trophies,' she informed.
'But they bought them,' I said simply.
Equestrian Style does not have a price tag.

 

Customer Reviews

7 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
2.9 out of 5 stars (7 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

33 of 38 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Not many horses, Sunday or otherwise..., August 2, 2004
By 
L. Alper (Englewood CO) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: A Sunday Horse: Inside the Grand Prix Show Jumping Circuit (Capital Lifestyles) (Hardcover)
For a book entitled "The Sunday Horse", one would expect it to have at least SOME horses discussed in the text; "The Sunday Horse OWNER" would really be a more apropos title for this lightweight tome.When I picked this book up, I was hoping that it would follow one particular rider or trainer or barn for their entire Grand Prix campaign. How interesting this could have been, getting to know one or two people in depth, learning about the horses they work with, the strengths & weaknesses, caring about their wins, losses, injuries...instead, I found 200 pages of 3 paragraph profiles of people who are either super-rich, or super-marginal.

The author, Vicky Moon, lists "People" magazine amongst her credits. It shows. Her writing is very much in "People"'s style, being rather breathless puff-pieces that spend considerable time dwelling on the "Lifestyles of the Rich & Horsey" aspects of her subjects. At each horse show covered in her book, the list of local socials & celebrities attending is given more attention than the International caliber horses competing!

Each chapter of this book covers one particular horse show & it's habitues, from the chairperson through the lady running a sweater shop. She opens at "Welly World" (Wellington FL, near Palm Beach) & closes at the Washington DC horse show. You may find out about the guy who directs traffic for the event, but you definitely won't know much about the Grand Prix competition itself!

As a long-time horsey person who has always dreamed of competing at Grand Prix level, I found one aspect of her book continually frustrating: she does not identify the horses in her photographs! You'll see pictures of great riders past (Rodney Jenkins, Anthony d'Ambrosio) & present (Marjorie Goldstein-Engle) but if you want to know the name of their mount, you won't find it either in either the text or the photo caption. With all the discussion of multi-million dollar equine talent in the book, one would think the horses would get an acknowledgement too; after all, these are HORSE shows, not RIDER shows!

Another annoying lack is one of either index or sources. Ms. Moon must have consulted literature other than show press releases; why not list them? Why make a reader page through the book looking for a mention of their particular favorites, when an index could make it so easy?

Typos, mis-spellings, and confusing sentences abound as well; this is a book in need of a good proof-reader!

If the only thing you know about Grand Prix show jumping is having seen it once or twice on television, you may enjoy "The Sunday Horse". If, however, you are a horse-lover who has stood at the In-Gate yourself, you won't find much here that you couldn't read in a People magazine article. What a shame.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars sure could've used a red pen, March 17, 2007
A Sunday Horse suffers from a lack of editing. The first chapter is terrible and the second is boring. Vicky Moon is a charming writer but somebody should've convinced her to either cut these two chapters or combine them into one. The book doesn't get fun until chapter three when she tells the story of a bizarre horse kidnapping. After that the book takes off with stories of grooms, writers, vets, carrot sellers, braiders, riders, and all the people who make the grand prix circuit run. One thing I really liked about the book is how Moon makes it clear that a person may not be a great rider and may never win the big shows but with talent, detrmination and flexibility they can still have a career that keeps them "in" horses.

I almost gave up during the first chapter but decided to keep reading because hey, I'd already spent my money, and I'm glad I kept going. Hopefully Vicky Moon will come out with a new edition that is packaged better..
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars An absolute mess, May 27, 2008
By 
Kerry Bailey (Wentzville, MO, USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
In the hands of a talented writer backed by good content and copy editors, this book really could have been something. Instead, it's a disjointed mishmash of name-dropping (an earlier reviewer's assessment of Moon's style as breathless is right on the money) and rambling attempts at folksy storytelling, riddled with grammar problems, non sequiturs, and typos. Let's just say I'm glad I bought it used.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
It's Tommy Bahama week in Welly World. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
grand prix ring, horse show mother, horse show world, horse show grounds, horse show circuit, hunter ring, jumper classes, winter circuit, hunter classes, medal team, grand prix events, horse business, horse events, grand prix circuit, main ring, show jumping, equestrian team, horse shows
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New York, Palm Beach, United States, New Jersey, World Cup, Devon Horse Show, Cismont Manor Farm, Los Angeles, Madison Square Garden, Las Vegas, San Diego, Ben O'Meara, Don Stewart, Rodney Jenkins, National Horse Show, Welly World, Washington Post, West Coast, Beezie Madden, Candice King, Joe Fargis, Mason the Maharaja, Rider of the Year, Anne Kursinski, Equestrian Club
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