Molly Gloss has written four or five earlier books, some juvenile or intermediate and some stories and poems. Her latest, The Hearts of Horses is described on Gloss's website thusly:
In the winter of 1917 many of the young ranch hands in this remote Eastern Oregon county have been called away to war. When 19-year-old Martha Lessen shows up at George Bliss's doorstep looking for work breaking horses, George glimpses beneath her showy rodeo costume a shy young woman with a serious knowledge of horses, and he hires her on. Martha's unusual, quiet way of breaking horses soon wins her additional work among several of George Bliss's neighbors, and over the course of the winter she helps out a German family whose wagon and horses have tipped off a narrow road into a ravine; she gentles a horse for a man who knows he is dying—a last gift to his young son; and she clashes with a hired hand who has been abusing horses with casual cruelty. Against the backdrop of a horrifying modern war, Martha gradually comes to feel enveloped by a sense of community and family she's never had before. And eventually, against her best intentions to lead a solitary cowboy life, she falls in love.
Molly Gloss lives in Portland, Oregon and has won numerous literary awards. Her book Wild Life was chosen as the 2002 selection for, "What if all Seattle read the same book?"
Our library currently owns:
- The Hearts of Horses (2007)
- Jump Off Creek (1989)
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