How about North Salem, a 75-minute train ride on the Metro North commuter line, a horsy town, with everything from hidden estates to raised ranches with Rubbermaid mailboxes _ along with a sprinkling of celebrities and a reputation for privacy.
42.
Analyses of horse love veer from the schlocky and prurient to the just plain schlocky, which may explain why, aside from this weirdly horsy month in fashion, you'll see more horse-and-girl pictures on dirty Web sites than in fashion magazines.
43.
A junior committee hopes to lure horsy young swells, 20-somethings with roman numerals after their names, some of whose grandparents and great-grandparents can be seen posing with cups and horseflesh in the fading black-and-white photographs on the clubhouse walls.
44.
Along with the traditional horsy set, buyers are increasingly professional " pinhookers, " who speculate by buying young horses and selling them as 2-year-olds ready for the races, as well as Wall Street tycoons and software entrepreneurs dabbling in horse sales.
45.
Other reviewers have noted, in the depiction of depression and suicide in " Chocolates, " and the frantic mood swings of Brenda in " The Horsy Set, " intimations of a bipolar disorder, for which diagnosis and treatment were at the time nearly non-existent.
46.
While Roberts, 64, made his reputation as a horseman, it wasn't until his first book, " The Man Who Listens to Horses, " hit The New York Times bestseller list and stayed there for two years that Roberts's reputation transcended the horsy set.
47.
Until then, Ms . von Stade's life had seemed charmed : born in horsy Somerville, N . J ., into an old-money family of bankers and polo players, she attended fine convent schools, babysat in Paris and toyed with summer stock, jingle singing and nightclub work.
48.
"Degas Photographs " will open at the Met in October, and the National Gallery in Washington is currently host to " Degas at the Races " ( a show that could lead one to say that Degas imparted a balletic grace to horses while lending ballerinas a horsy awkwardness ).
49.
Anyone who can't picture a same-sex marriage should turn to the new issue of Boston Magazine, which tells the happy story of two men who live together openly in the horsy suburb of Ipswich, where they raise two children in domestic peace, without frightening either the neighbors or the horses.
50.
Dan Visel speculates that this may be partially explained by the change in the tone of the later books : " . . . what stands out most about The Horsy Set is the unrelenting darkness it presents; in its depiction of depression, it prefigures The Bell Jar, which would be published the next year.