REVIEW: Buck Paints a Stirring Portrait of the Real-Life Horse Whisperer

The formidable subject of Buck shares his initials and ideals with another, even more imposing romantic hero. Black Beauty, a horse with a human range of intellect and emotion, is the title character and narrator of Anna Sewell’s 1877 novel. His life story is marked by hardship and hard work, all of it at the mercy of morally variable owners. Sewell wanted her readers in horse-dependent 19th-century England to see their mounts, carriage-pullers, and field-plowers not as insensible beasts but creatures worthy of respect and compassion. Buck Brannaman, a Wyoming horse trainer with a resume that includes inspiring the Nicholas Evans novel that became Robert Redford’s 1998 movie The Horse Whisperer , is the 21st-century embodiment of that same cause.

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REVIEW: Buck Paints a Stirring Portrait of the Real-Life Horse Whisperer

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