A Ranch Vet’s Verse

While I was in a veterinary store in Lobos, a neighboring town twenty kilometers north of a ranch I was visiting, I noticed a stack of brown and red books on the corner of the display-case that divides the tellers from the customers. I picked up one of them and recognized the cover illustration as a Gustavo Solari, a local and internationally famous artist. The title of the book was Versos de un Doctor Criollo (A Ranch Veterinarian’s Verses), and it was written by Fernando M. Terrizzano, a veterinarian who lives on a ranch that borders the same river my friend’s ranch borders, El Río Salado (The Salty River). I didn’t even open the book to read a few of the poems. I just decided to support the local artists by purchasing the book. I am glad I did. What I like about the book is the quality of writing, the attitude of the narrator, and the vivid characterizations. Terrizzano reveals the rustic realities that accompany pastoral settings while portraying the ranch workers as human beings. As Bruce Chatwin said once, “If you can’t maintain the dignity of the people you are writing about, then you shouldn’t be telling their stories in the first place.” Many scenes in the book are Wild-Western. More importantly the book has Green Appeal, as the narrator watches pastures and wetlands transform into biosphere-poisoning mass agriculture.

The book is available by going to or contacting anyone in the veterinary office La Ensenada

AddressSan Martín 8
City   Lobos
Provence – Buenos Aires
Telephone  02227 – 42-2009

2 Responses to A Ranch Vet’s Verse

  1. Hi Stephen, Thank you for your encouraging comments on my blog. I am always happy about clicking over to yours because the variety of content is so appealing. I of course was drawn to this post because of the “ranch” theme but all of your reviews and observations are refreshing and real. You are appreciated.

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