Review by Booklist Review
As a young girl, novelist Maum (Costalegre, 2019) rode horses until her parents' divorce and the complications of her brother's illness forced her to quit. Now grown, married, and mother to a toddler, she has a seemingly perfect life. But she isn't sleeping, she struggles with her strong-willed daughter, and her marriage is fraying. She knows she's depressed. Therapy proves helpful in recalling the struggles of her parents' divorce and her anorexia as a youth. Driving home from one of her first sessions, she sees horses and remembers the joy and freedom she felt when riding. Maum here explores the love affair many young girls have with horses, in particular reminiscing about the horse in The Neverending Story. Slowly, she comes to realize that the need to achieve and have control has its limits. On a whim, she decides to try polo, which fills her with fear but also makes her feel alive. Many women may find much to relate to in Maum's vulnerable and human story, which could be a favorite for book clubs.
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
In this wry and tender account, novelist Maum (Costalegre) chronicles her attempt to rekindle joy through a return to her childhood love of horseback riding. Three decades after her last ride, Maum was spurred to get back in the saddle when, as a new mother in her mid-30s, she became depressed. "Frequently referred to as a 'stealth therapy,' interaction with horses has been known to benefit people," she writes. "If you aren't calm, the horse won't be, either." She charts her "mental health improvement spree" with sardonic humor and a discerning gaze (upon first meeting her therapist, she laments, "there is no way I can bare my soul to a twentysomething in a Livestrong bracelet"). Meanwhile, despite the "violent" nature of polo, she takes up the sport and rediscovers her sensuality, a liberating contrast to her writing career and struggle to get pregnant again. Interspersed throughout are entertaining morsels of horse culture history--from polo's contested origins in either China or Persia to the hero's drowning horse in The NeverEnding Story. While cynics might categorize Maum's memoir as a midlife crisis story, she resists the label: "When we bang our fists against the bars of middle age, it's usually because there is a voice within us that is sick to death of going unused." Her account of recovering that voice is vivid and exuberantly cathartic. (May)
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Review by Kirkus Book Review
A despondent writer finds solace on horseback. Novelist Maum has loved horses from the age of 5, when her wish to Santa was answered in the form of a large rocking horse. Wishing harder the next year, she finally got a pony of her own. But she stopped riding when she was 9, when her parents' divorce and her younger brother's life-threatening illness shut down the expensive and time-consuming pleasure. Maum's forthright, searching memoir centers on her rediscovery of her "joyful, weird, magical" love of horses and her gradual emergence from debilitating depression, insomnia, and overwhelming sadness. At the age of 37, she was a productive writer, married to a French filmmaker, mother of a young daughter, living in a charming New England town. "That I felt sadness was undeniable," she admits, "but I felt no right to claim it." A therapist helped her reflect on her past to find the source of the fears, perfectionism, and competitiveness that dogged her throughout her life and threatened her marriage and her relationship with her daughter. But Maum was drawn, besides, to engage in something physical, an activity so consuming that, she hoped, it would open up "an escape from my domestic life." Impulsively, she decided to take riding lessons, which proved more challenging--and more rewarding--than she had anticipated. "Frequently referred to as a 'stealth therapy,' " she learned, "interaction with horses has been known to benefit people who struggle with anxiety, depression, post-traumatic stress, and fearfulness because horses mirror human emotions. If you aren't calm, the horse won't be, either, and denial doesn't get you far with a herd animal." Maum's pleasure in riding led her to polo--"something that I wasn't good at, that made me afraid," and for which she needed to learn a new set of skills, including the ability just to have fun. A sensitive, well-rendered chronicle of healing. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.