“This is a book about Hollywood’s glory days and its stunt men, about the barbaric ways we used to treat movie animals, how that slowly improved, and how one amazing thoroughbred-quarter mix named Cocaine (think Seabiscuit) learned the hard way the art of fast falling. It’ll change how you watch animals who appear on the big screen.”—Larry Tye, New York Times best-selling author of Satchel: The Life and Times of an American Legend
“From silent film horse actors such as Fritz to latter-day superstars like Cocaine, Twisting in Air celebrates the bravery and athleticism of equine entertainers. More importantly, it shows how the bond between horse and human can help both achieve great things.”—Cynthia Branigan, author of The Last Diving Horse in America
“Twisting in Air is by turns a well-researched and damning indictment of Hollywood’s callous disregard for the welfare of horses (and their riders) from the days of the nickelodeons to the present, as well as an endearing account of the relationship of one of the industry’s most famed stunt horsemen, Chuck Roberson with his extraordinary ‘falling horse’ Cocaine. Chock-full of anecdotes from the glory days of the Westerns, including unvarnished glimpses of famed director John Ford (‘he looked like a sack of walnuts in the saddle’), John Wayne, Cecil B. DeMille, and many more, this book will appeal to horse lovers, fans of the genre, and students of the American experience alike. Mount up!”—Les Standiford, author of the New York Times best-selling Last Train to Paradise
“The Western, Hollywood’s earliest and most enduring genre, couldn’t exist without horsepower. . . . If you love horses—and who doesn’t?—you’ll enjoy Bradley’s authoritative and thoroughly entertaining account of the rise and fall and rise again of the men and animals who tamed the West, at least in the movies, and created a legend all their own.”—Glenn Frankel, Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist and author of The Searchers: The Making of an American Legend
“Carol Bradley has written a necessary book about the horses and the stuntmen that made possible the action exploits of the great Western stars, as well as the bonds of shared trust and devotion between rider and mount—and the cruelty imposed by Hollywood’s invariable need for expedience and speed.”—Scott Eyman, New York Times best-selling author of John Wayne: The Life and Legend