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Horse Girls

Recovering, Aspiring, and Devoted Riders Redefine the Iconic Bond

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

“A wild, rollicking ride into the heart of horse country—these essays get at what it means to love horses, in all that love's complexity.” —Anton DiSclafani, author of The Yonahlossee Riding Camp for Girls

A compelling and provocative essay collection that smashes stereotypes and redefines the meaning of the term “horse girl,” broadening it for women of all cultural backgrounds.


As a child, horses consumed Halimah Marcus’ imagination. When she wasn’t around horses she was pretending to be one, cantering on two legs, hands poised to hold invisible reins. To her classmates, girls like Halimah were known as “horse girls,” weird and overzealous, absent from the social worlds of their peers. 

Decades later, when memes about “horse girl energy,” began appearing across social media—Halimah reluctantly recognized herself. The jokes imagine girls as blinkered as carriage ponies, oblivious to the mockery behind their backs. The stereotypical horse girl is also white, thin, rich, and straight, a daughter of privilege. Yet so many riders don’t fit this narrow, damaging ideal, and relate to horses in profound ways that include ambivalence and regret, as well as unbridled passion and devotion.

Featuring some of the most striking voices in contemporary literature—including Carmen Maria Machado, Pulitzer-prize winner Jane Smiley, T Kira Madden, Maggie Shipstead, and Courtney Maum—Horse Girls reframes the iconic bond between girls and horses with the complexity and nuance it deserves. And it showcases powerful emerging voices like Braudie Blais-Billie, on the connection between her Seminole and Quebecois heritage; Sarah Enelow-Snyder, on growing up as a Black barrel racer in central Texas; and Nur Nasreen Ibrahim, on the colonialist influence on horse culture in Pakistan.

By turns thought-provoking and personal, Horse Girls reclaims its titular stereotype to ask bold questions about autonomy and desire, privilege and ambition, identity and freedom, and the competing forces of domestication and wildness.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from May 24, 2021
      Electric Literature editor Marcus collects reflections on the “horse girl” in this dynamic anthology. The “horse girl,” as Marcus describes in her introduction, is a stereotype for adolescent girls who like horses: she’s “friendly and enthusiastic and no sense of irony,” and the 14 essays that follow use the horse-human bond as a starting place to examine gender, sexuality, race, class, and the tension between domestication and liberation. In “Horse Girl: An Inquiry,” Carmen Maria Machado outlines her childhood desire to own and ride horses despite the fact that, according to the trope, such girls are usually white, heterosexual, wealthy, and feminine. Alex Marzano-Lesnevich, meanwhile, skillfully recounts in “Hungry and Carefree” trans and nonbinary riders of the past, along with their own personal reflections on girlhood, and “Unconquered” sees Braudie Blais-Billie musing on horses as a symbol of Indigenous resilience and survival. The essays are tender, critical, and deeply personal, and the universal themes of growth and belonging come through consistently but, refreshingly, never feel repetitive. Eminently thoughtful and fascinatingly intimate, this goes a long way toward shattering a stereotype. Agent: Sarah Bowlin, Aevitas Creative Management.

    • Library Journal

      June 18, 2021

      This collection of essays, edited by Marcus (executive director, Electric Literature), isn't just about horses; it's also about perseverance, identity, and breaking stereotypes. In the introduction, Marcus describes the imagined "horse girl" of internet memes: a privileged, white, heterosexual, cis woman. The essays in this collection, however, are by writers of diverse sexualities, class origins, and racial, ethnic, and gender identities; each essay has its own powerful voice. The opening essay, written by T Kira Madden in short sentences with witty sarcasm, is about the horses who do all the work when ridden. Carmen Maria Machado follows with an essay broken into short sections, one of which consists only of unique and absurd horse show names. Other essays in the collection use varied storytelling devices: Alex Marzano-Lesnevich compares their own riding experiences to an 1800s historical tale; Allie Rowbottom's present-tense perspective looks at events from her riding past that evoke the same emotions today as when they happened. VERDICT All readers, whether they love riding or have never seen a horse up close, will appreciate these essays. This collection not only shares multiple perspectives from the communities of riders and horse fans but also provides commentary on growing up and dealing with both disappointments and successes.--Natalie Browning, Longwood Univ. Lib., Farmville, VA

      Copyright 2021 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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