Tag Archive for: Kentucky Derby

My Lifelong Passion for Horseracing

Hi everyone, today I’m pleased to give up my blog date to introduce you to a special friend of mine. Annette Dashofy and I have been online critique partners, beta readers and personal friends since I’m thinking 2003. She’s an amazing human being who likes horses, cats, and squirrels — sometimes I fear more than she likes people. Seriously, she’s a great human, which is why I’m giving her the floor to talk about her lifelong passion for horseracing and a great novel I highly recommend. Please welcome Annette Dashofy.   ~Donnell Ann Bell 

Author Annette Dashofy

When you ask a group of mystery authors who they read when they were kids, the majority will offer answers like Nancy Drew or Encyclopedia Brown. While I may have read a few of the Nancy Drews, my passion rested elsewhere. I read every book Walter Farley wrote. Multiple times. I loved both The Black Stallion and The Island Stallion series.  

Yes, there was a movie. [https://youtu.be/kGp9u56FJKs]

The books are better although the movie was quite good.

Farley’s books played a huge role in my passion for horses. Long before I
owned a real one, I had a barn full of pretend ones. 



The horses were pretend. The barn was real, but the only livestock it
housed was cattle.


I “rode” my pretend horses, being the rider from the waist up and the
horse from the waist down. I galloped around the farm and sometimes around
imaginary racetracks. I had an equally horse-crazy, Walter Farley-reading
friend who shared my rider/horse fantasies. We’d hold “match races” for our
horses. Mine usually lost. 
 


My love of horseracing may have started with and been fueled by Alec and
The Black from the Farley books, but the real thing quickly drew me in. Back
then, the only races broadcast on television were the Triple Crown races: the
Kentucky Derby, the Preakness, and the Belmont Stakes. 



The first winner I
remember was a Venezuelan longshot by the name of Canonero II who came from
behind to win the Derby in 1971. Experts deemed the victory a fluke. He proved
them wrong by also winning the Preakness. Bitten by the Triple Crown bug at the
age of 11, my heart broke when he came up short, finishing fourth in the
Belmont. 

Two years later, a horse by the name of Secretariat won all three Triple
Crown races, the first to do so in twenty-five years. My love of the sport was
solidified. Watching the videos of Secretariat, especially his Belmont win,
still takes my breath away. 


Okay, we sold him when he was a yearling, so I never got to ride him, but
he was black and he was male, so that counts.


Fast forward again to 2021. Medina Spirit, a moderate longshot, won the
Kentucky Derby on May 1. The second leg of the Triple Crown is this Saturday,
May 15. Will Medina Spirit claim the second leg as well? If so, horseracing fans
worldwide, myself included, will be in a frenzy leading into the first Saturday
in June.


And I have the book I started in 2005 finally coming out tomorrow. The
fact that the cover is reminiscent of several of Farley’s books is total
coincidence. The fact that I’m releasing it in the middle of the Triple Crown races
is not.


Death by Equine is set in the world of Thoroughbred racing,
although far from Churchill Downs, Pimlico, or Belmont.


About Death by Equine:  Veterinarian
Jessie Cameron agrees to fill in for her mentor, Doc Lewis, at Riverview
Racetrack so he can take a long-overdue vacation. When he’s tragically killed
by one of his equine patients the night before he’s supposed to leave, Jessie
quickly suspects the death is anything but accidental. Her search for the truth
is thwarted by everyone from well-meaning friends to the police, including her
soon-to-be-ex-husband. Undaunted, she discovers layers of illegal activities
and deceit being perpetrated by the man she thought of as a father figure,
creating a growing list of suspects with reason to want Doc dead. Too late, she
realizes that her dogged quest for the truth has put her in the crosshairs of a
devious killer desperate to silence her. Permanently.

https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B08YH164YW

About the Author:  Annette Dashofy is the USA
Today
best-selling author of the multi–Agatha Award nominated Zoe Chambers
mystery series about a paramedic and deputy coroner in rural Pennsylvania’s
tight-knit Vance Township. Her latest release, a standalone, is Death by
Equine
, about a veterinarian at a second-rate thoroughbred racetrack
seeking the truth about her mentor’s mysterious death. She and her husband live
on ten acres of what was her grandfather’s dairy farm in southwestern
Pennsylvania with their very spoiled cat, Kensi. https://www.annettedashofy.com/