JOHN SCHAEFER’S SUMMER AT THE RACES

Park Slope’s John Schaefer spends most of the year as the host of WNYC radio’s music talk show “Soundcheck,” which features live performances and interviews with a variety of guests. Since 1982, Schaefer has also hosted and produced the popular new music radio program “New Sounds,” hailed as “The #1 radio show for the Global Village” by Billboard magazine. He is also a horse racing fanatic and spends part of his summer in Saratoga. As he said on WNYC this morning: “I work all year, I have a family, I have a house to renovate and a soccer team to coach. So I don’t get to say it often. But today, I have to see a man about a horse.” His reflections on horseracing are included in a recent anthology about horseracing called “Bloodlines: A Horse Racing Anthology”

Here’s the blurb from what sounds like an interesting collection:

A From provocative peeks into the lives of jockeys, trainers, owners, and breeders, to the down and dirty doings of bookies and gamblers, here is a literary tribute to a favorite national pastime. Editors Maggie Estep (Diary of an Emotional Idiot; Flamethrower) and Jason Starr (Twisted City; Lights Out) have brought together original fiction and nonfiction from some of our most beloved writers. Lee Child heads off the collection with a thrilling story about a hit man hired to knock off a horse mid-race. Laura Lippman contributes a vivid tale about a young man who makes money selling parking places at the Preakness and the intriguing woman he meets. Here is Bill Barich on the misfortunes of an Irish gambler, Joe R. Lansdale on one man’s ambition to win a mule race in east Texas, Laura Hillenbrand on the Kentucky Derby, and James Surowiecki on the wisdom of horse-racing crowds. Jonathan Ames adds his unique theory of horse love, Meghan O’Rourke shares her touching recollections of going to Saratoga as a child, and Jane Smiley tells of her experiences raising thoroughbreds. This standout collection on horse-racing featuring twenty authors, from national bestsellers to Pulitzer Prize winners, is as page-turning as it is diverse.

Also includes pieces by Ken Bruen, Steven Crist, Maggie Estep, William Nack, Scott Phillips, John Schaefer, Jerry Stahl, Jason Starr, Charlie Stella, Wallace Stroby, and Daniel Woodrell.