Bonecrack

by Dick Francis

Hardcover, 1971

DDC/MDS

823/.9/14

Publication

New York : Harper & Row, 1971.

Original publication date

1971

Description

Fiction. Mystery. Suspense. Thriller. Dick Francis, the bestselling master of mystery and suspense, takes you into the thrilling world of horse racing. In the middle of the night, two masked men break into Neil Griffon's home and abduct him. He quickly discovers that unless he agrees to their unreasonable demands, they will destroy his father's precious horse and racing stable, and ultimately Neil himself. Returned to his father's stables, he must find a way to bring down these criminals, because having to choose between his integrity and his life is no choice at all...

Status

Available

Call number

823/.9/14

Tags

Collection

User reviews

LibraryThing member cbl_tn
Businessman Neil Griffon is filling in for his trainer father while the elder Griffon recovers from severe injuries from a car wreck. His plans to hire a temporary trainer are soon derailed when he is kidnapped and nearly killed. The kidnapper’s 18-year-old son wants to ride the champion horse
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Archangel in this year’s Derby, and it will be Neil’s job to make this happen. If Neil fails, the kidnapper will destroy the elder Griffon’s business. Neil has to figure out a way to save his father’s stables without compromising his integrity.

This was not my favorite Francis novel. I never really warmed up to Neil, and the bad guy was so over the top that he was more a caricature than a character. I did like that the head lad in the stables is female. This was probably groundbreaking at the time of its publication in 1971.
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LibraryThing member tripleblessings
A rich monomaniac, Rivera, will stop at nothing, not blackmail or murder, to ensure his son will be a crack Derby jockey. Neil Griffon is a trainer's son, who is compelled to hire the rich young man Alessandro Rivera as head jockey, or else the family stable will be destroyed. A good light suspense
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read.
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LibraryThing member robin4now
Dick Francis, a former steeplechase jockey, creates yet another suspenseful novel that is centers around the world of horse racing in England. Neil Griffon is forced to take over his father's stables when his father has an accident. In the typical fashion of Francis heroes Neil is soon beaten to a
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pulp and kidnapped by a crime lord. The crime lord promises Neil his freedom if Neil agrees to let the crime boss's son ride the stable's number one horse the Archangel in the Derby. You won't be able to put this or any other Dick Francis book down once you start them so get comfortable.
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LibraryThing member DocWalt10
Very fast read. The main character's father was very much like mine. Could identify with their relationship. It is well crafted, by Dick Francis, the developing relationship, between the main character and the young man, forced on him, by an autocratic father, bent on giving his son what ever he
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wanted, regardless of the consequences.
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LibraryThing member JulesJones
Neil Griffon is abducted and threatened late one night. But what is demanded of him is highly unusual -- that he make a particular young man a jockey at his father's training stable. Not for the obvious reasons -- no fixed races, no attempt to corrupt the betting process. Just a gift from a father
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to his son, who wants more than anything else in the world to ride a winning race on a particular horse.

Griffon has no choice, not when the horses are under threat. But there are more subtle ways to deal with a blackmailer than direct confrontation...

An excellent thriller, and a fascinating study of father-son relationships. There's some lovely characterisation in this book, and Francis builds on that to show how the two main characters change with the experiences they're put through.
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LibraryThing member raizel
I picked this up thinking it would be a mystery; it isn't. Instead it's about a man forced into a mentoring relationship. I enjoyed the characters, except for the awful fathers of course.
LibraryThing member hailelib
Vintage Francis with a copyright date of 1971. Neil Griffon has returned to Rowley Lodge to look after the training stables while his father is in the hospital with a badly broken leg. The story opens when two thugs kidnap him and take him to their boss, Enso Rivera. Rivera tells Neil that he will
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take on Enso's son as the lead jockey for Rowley Lodge or else the stable and its business will be destroyed. Among other themes the novel explores father-son relationships, especially dysfunctional ones. I would rate this particular book as being about middling quality for Francis and would recommend it, especially for Francis fans.
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LibraryThing member HeatherLINC
I am definitely a fan of Dick Francis. His books are always entertaining and suspenseful with intelligent, stoic heroes and cruel villains. In "Bonecrack," Neil Griffon was forced into a desperate situation on the first page which grabbed the reader's attention immediately. Unlike the other books I
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have read by this author, horse racing wasn't the main focus. Instead, the novel concentrated on father-son relationships and the negative impacts fathers can have on their boys.

Although I didn't like young Alessandro at the start, he was arrogant and spoilt, thankfully, under Neil's guidance, he changed for the better and by the end I felt quite sorry for him. The only thing I didn't like about "Bonecrack" was the murders of three beautiful race horses. I hated that Alessandro's father used them to try and bend Griffon to his will. So unnecessary! However, I did appreciate the lengths Griffon went to to protect his jockeys and horses and keep them safe. A very enjoyable read.
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LibraryThing member rosalita
There are two themes that run through most if not all of Dick Francis’ acclaimed mysteries: All of them involve the sport of horse racing to a greater or lesser degree, and most of them feature protagonists with less than convivial family relationships. Both conditions turn up in Francis’
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[Bonecrack] (1971), which I re-read recently as part of a group read in the 75-Book Challenge group.

Neil Griffon is a business wunderkind, who accumulated a fortune buying and selling antiques and went on to make a career out of diagnosing and advising struggling businesses. He has a polite but distant relationship with his father, a highly successful horse trainer in Newcastle. When his father suffers an accident that lands him in the hospital with a complicatedly broken leg, Neil steps in to keep the stable running until his father is on his feet again. With his business instincts, it doesn’t take Neil long to discover that the place is in financial difficulties, a fact his father has been hiding from everyone.

Before Neil has time to absorb all of this, he is kidnapped from his father’s office and forced to hire the mastermind’s son as an apprentice jockey, despite his utter lack of experience. On his own, Neil would be inclined to risk the consequences of refusing such extortion, but there’s his father and the stable’s shaky finances to consider, as well as the fact that the kidnappers cleverly threaten not his own life but those of his father’s horses. How Neil balances giving the kidnappers enough of what they want while finding ways to use the apprentice’s own complicated father-son relationship to his advantage, provides most of the novel’s interest.

This isn’t one of my favorite Francis novels. Because we don’t meet Neil’s father until he’s already laid up in hospital, it’s hard to get a sense of him as a fully formed human being. That makes the estrangement between him and Neil feel somewhat distant rather than visceral, and makes it harder to understand why Neil is so intent on solving his problem with the least amount of damage to his father’s business and reputation. And the mastermind criminal’s villainy is so broadly drawn as to seem cartoonish. But some secondary characters are appealing, including the stable’s female head groom. And Alessandro, aspiring jockey and son of a thug, undergoes the kind of personal transformation under subtle manipulation from Neil that makes him by far the most compelling character in the whole book.

A final note: I do not recommend this book to anyone who recoils at the depiction of animals being injured (a theme Francis would return to in 1987’s [Bolt]). The violence can seem jarring, especially at the hands of Francis, whose own love and respect for horses makes them full-fledged characters alongside the humans.
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LibraryThing member streamsong
Neil Griffon ran away from his horse trainer father’s domineering ways when Neil was a young teenager. But now, his father has been badly injured and Neil comes to his aid to run the business involving millions of dollars of horses until a highly reputable horseman can be found to take over.

But
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before that can happen, Neil is kidnapped. He is told that the kidnapper’s son must be taken into the racing stable and allowed to act as a top jockey, riding the favorite horse or the entire stable will be destroyed. To back up his threats, a horse has its leg broken. When Neil doesn’t please the kidnapping thug as to the way his boy is progressing, another horse dies.

Neil must stay and see it through.

It’s an interesting look at two very different dysfunctional father and son relationships: the first where the son resisted his father; the second where the father demands the unreasonable to indulge his son’s whim.

As in most of Francis’ novels the protagonist Neil is a good guy who also endures incredible amounts of pain.

But can he hold things together, using what is at best an amateur jockey backed by his sociopathic father, for the months until his own father can once more take the reins?

I was glad to see that even written in 1971 (fifty years ago!), there is a reasonably good women’s role as the head ‘lad’ who became the actual trainer was a talented woman.
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Awards

Physical description

201 p.; 22 cm

ISBN

0060113197 / 9780060113193
Page: 0.6528 seconds