Inheritance of Horses
Inheritance of Horses
JAMES KILGO
Copyright Date: 1994
Published by: University of Georgia Press
Pages: 160
https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt46nh7j
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Book Info
Inheritance of Horses
Book Description:

Reconciliation and remembering are the forces at work in Inheritance of Horses. In these essays, James Kilgo seeks the common ground between his roles as a man, as husband and father, and as heir to his family legacy. Pausing at mid-life to make an eloquent, understated stand against our era's rootlessness, he honors friendship, kinship, nature, and tradition. In the opening section, Kilgo focuses on the tension between his need for ritualistic male camaraderie and his familial obligations. Searching the woods for arrowheads, sitting around the dinner table at a hunting lodge, or careening down an abandoned logging road in a pickup, he seems ever-prone to the intrusions of domesticity and civilization: a sudden memory of miring the family station wagon in the sand on a beach trip, an encounter with a couple on their sixtieth wedding anniversary, a stream littered with trash and stocked with overbred hatchery trout. Restlessness and responsibility converge and again clash in the second series of essays, in which domestic themes are explored in settings that range from Kilgo's own living room to Yellowstone Park and the deep waters off the Virgin Islands. Through such images as a hornet's nest, a gale-force storm, a grizzly bear, and a marlin, Kilgo gauges the strengths and vulnerabilities of his family and moves toward an existence that is part of, not apart from, the women in his life. The long title essay composes the book's final section. Reading through a cache of letters exchanged between his two grandfathers, Kilgo recovers and revises his memories of them. What he learns of their open, passionate friendship reveals an essentially feminine aspect of their patriarchal natures, enriching, but also confusing, Kilgo's earlier understanding of who they were. As some of the more unhappy or unpleasant details of his grandfathers' lives come to light, they first heighten, then assuage, Kilgo's ambivalence about a family heritage built as much on myth as on truth. The manner in which Kilgo makes such intensely personal concerns so broadly relevant accentuates what might be called the "told," rather than the "written," quality of Inheritance of Horses. He is foremost a storyteller, working in a style that is classically southern in its pacing and its feel for the land, but all his own in its restrained humor and lack of self-absorption. Guided by a storyteller's respect for common people and common feelings, Kilgo never prescribes or moralizes but rather brings us to places where principled choices can be made about what we need and value most in our lives.

eISBN: 978-0-8203-4627-4
Subjects: History, Language & Literature
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  1. Front Matter
    Front Matter (pp. i-vi)
  2. Table of Contents
    Table of Contents (pp. vii-viii)
  3. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
    ACKNOWLEDGMENTS (pp. ix-xii)
  4. OYSTERCATCHERS
    OYSTERCATCHERS (pp. 1-4)

    Back when we were young enough to believe that the rest of our lives would take forever, Ocean Isle Beach was undeveloped, an empty stretch of marsh and sand, naked to the south Atlantic sun. Someone had recently built a bridge from the mainland, and if you looked closely you could see where developers had staked out streets and lots, one of which belonged to my father, but on that day in May we had the island to ourselves—two couples still new at the business of adulthood.

    We had met Dick and Sandy nine months before, soon after he...

  5. PART 1
    • INDIAN GIVERS
      INDIAN GIVERS (pp. 7-20)

      Most of the boys I grew up with were more interested in playing baseball and football than they were in hunting and fishing and camping, but I was different. Until I was twelve or thirteen, I would rather have found an arrowhead than hit a home run. I had no more hope of doing one than the other, however, assuming that most of the arrowheads in our part of the state had already been collected. Had it not been for the Dargans, in fact, I would probably have concluded that arrowheads were as extinct as the ivory-billed woodpeckers, but the...

    • MOUNTAIN SPIRITS
      MOUNTAIN SPIRITS (pp. 21-32)

      The man who told me how to find Bascomb Creek had lowered his voice to keep from being overheard by the people standing near us. “It’s hard to find but it’s easy to fish,” he’d whispered, “and it’s jumping with trout. Just keep it to yourself.” That sounded too good to be true, but as soon as I got home, I called my friend Charlie Creedmore. At five o’clock the following Saturday morning we were driving north toward Rabun County. At first light we crossed the concrete bridge over Bascomb Creek, pulled over at a wide spot in the gravel...

    • COMING OFF THE BACK OF BRASSTOWN BALD
      COMING OFF THE BACK OF BRASSTOWN BALD (pp. 33-45)

      Even when he was married, Billy Claypoole was subject to impulses that drove him from home, down the blacktop county roads through the waning afternoons, into the night. Sometimes he stopped at my house, unannounced, wanting me to go with him.

      Looking back after ten years, I’m more impressed now by my wife’s forbearance than I was then. Occasionally Billy surprised us in the late afternoon, when she was cooking supper, sometimes on Saturday morning, just in time to save me from a weekend of yard work. I’m sure she was not happy about my riding off in that blue...

    • HIGH BLOOD
      HIGH BLOOD (pp. 46-56)

      Just above the toilet, directly in front of my eyes, hangs a framed stanza of verse:

      There’s a race of men that don’t fit in,

      A race that won’t sit still.

      They break the hearts of kith and kin

      And roam the world at will.

      Singsong doggerel by Robert W. Service, but it nails Billy Claypoole like an epitaph, throws a little light on this guy John Trotter too, whose facilities I’m availing myself of. Billy has whisked me off to the ice and snow of the north Georgia mountains to meet him, the purpose of the trip no more...

  6. PART 2
    • TAKEN BY STORM
      TAKEN BY STORM (pp. 59-67)

      My grandfather spent the last thirty years of his life in bed, victim of an assortment of chronic maladies. During my childhood, he seemed to suffer one crisis after another—the deliriums of high fever, internal bleeding, and once, a stroke that left him tangled in the sheets at the foot of the bed. These afflictions took him and us by storm. The news would come crackling through the long-distance wire, my mother’s face revealing on the phone the danger he was in. I always had trouble accepting it. Since I had never seen him in such extremity, I could...

    • OPEN HOUSE
      OPEN HOUSE (pp. 68-77)

      For the last two weeks a summer tanager has been pecking at the window in our den. All day he’s at it, fluttering, breast to glass, peck, peck, peck. I know, of course, what he’s doing. He is mistaking his reflection for a rival tanager. Cardinals and mockingbirds are famous for the same behavior, but I have not known either of those species to sustain its belligerence for so long.

      At first I was glad to have the tanager. Wild creatures have always been welcome in our yard. My wife and I put out nest boxes for titmice, crested flycatchers,...

    • A GIFT FROM THE BEAR
      A GIFT FROM THE BEAR (pp. 78-96)

      It’s a rare thing these days to come face to face with a wild animal that is powerful enough to kill you. In the lower forty-eight your best bet is Glacier or Yellowstone National Park. It’s not likely even in those places, but it is possible because grizzlies live there. I say not likely. Thousands of campers and fishermen hike the backcountry trails every summer without finding so much as a pile of dry bear scat. Yet my friend Billy Claypoole saw a grizzly on his first trip to Yellowstone. With a man from Bozeman, Montana, he was riding horseback...

    • ACCORDING TO HEMINGWAY
      ACCORDING TO HEMINGWAY (pp. 97-112)

      Good fish stories start with good fish. Trout is the choice of most writers, which is not surprising when you consider that trout fishing traces its ancestry back to a book. Ernest Hemingway wrote the best trout-fishing story in American literature, maybe in the world, then went fishing in the Gulf Stream and discovered that marlin are also literary fish. But it takes more than a literary fish to make a good fish story.

      Hemingway wrote well about marlin fishing in The Old Man and the Sea, but he wrote about it best when it was still new to him,...

  7. PART 3
    • INHERITANCE OF HORSES
      INHERITANCE OF HORSES (pp. 115-145)

      Jim Kilgo loved a spirited horse and he drove with a heavy foot. You may think I’m mixing metaphors, but those are literal facts. When he was fifty-two, his friend Bob Lawton told him to “take things more quietly, strive for inward peace, make the world your brother, and you will live to be as old as a cypress tree.” But Jim was too revved up. To me he left his name, five hundred dollars, and an L. C. Smith shotgun engraved with our initials. Only four at the time, I have been haunted ever since, longing to recover him,...

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