I THINK this might be a cheap read for someone who doesn't have any experience and does not own a horse. I found one basic premise that was true. One. Horses have eyes set on the sides of their head, therefore idiots who run up straight at a horses are in their blind spot. I figured this out with a Mexican burro at age eight. For the rest of the book there is no information for an experienced horse person. There is no allowance for the differences in how an Arab might think and how a Tennessee Walking Horse might process information from humans. This is a dangerous lack of intrinsic knowledge. By breed, by sex, by personal intellect each horse, and I've ridden most breeds, thinks and reacts to humans differently. I prefer stallions and boss mares for intellect and the challenge, but this author would make you think handling a breeding stallion and a child-safe gelding is all the same game. Read because it's cheap, but learn by spending time with horses---not this book.