Liza J. Nicholas is the author of Becoming Western: Stories of Culture and Identity in the Cowboy State (Nebraska, 2008) and coeditor of Imagining the Big Open: Nature, Identity, and Play in the New West.
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Description
"Beautifully written and impeccably researched, Liza Nicholas's Bloodlines portrays the nomadic and insular life of horse racing, as her family travels across America in the wake of her father, who trained and raced thoroughbreds. Nicholas's depiction of this world of bush boys, jockeys, and trainers in this American story of reinvention and restlessness is as powerful as her father's desire for the next great horse."--Caroline Patterson, author of The Stone Sister, winner of the 2021 High Plains Book Award "In clear, honest, and eloquent prose, Liza Nicholas examines the double-edged and lasting inheritance of our parents' dreams and ambitions. Bloodlines avoids false nostalgia and maps the reality and sacrifice of recognizing and even accommodating those larger-than-life yet often invisible forces as we strive to shape our own narratives. Hard-earned empathy, compassion, and wisdom fill these pages."--Robert Stubblefield, director of the University of Montana Press

