A Cow's Life
The Surprising History of Cattle and How the Black Angus Came to Be Home on the Range
M. R. Montgomery
A bovine tour de force
Millions of people, from nature lovers to collectors of cow
memorabilia, are enamored of cows, yet few have any
inkling of the fascinating history of, arguably, the animal most
crucial to the survival and advancement of human civilization.
Our close relationship with cows goes back eight thousand
years, to the revolutionary advent of domestication in
Mesopotamia and the Indus River valley. Since then, humans
have relied on cows for milk, meat, and muscle.
M. R. Montgomery’s own keen interest in cows began on his
cousin’s Montana cattle ranch. He traces their history from
the formidable, long-extinct Auroch—the 6,000-pound
ancestor of all cattle on Earth—to the ancient cattle roads and
drives in England, to the selective mixing practiced by British
cattlemen well before Charles Darwin or Gregor Mendel. He
charts the origin of breeds and relates the path by which the
Aberdeen-Angus has today become the “king of cows.” With a
sympathetic eye for detail, born of his own experience, he
chronicles the day-to-day life of cattle and their keepers—
from encouraging good mothering skills to rooting out genetic
disease in a herd. After experiencing Montgomery’s bovine
fascination, even cow lovers will have new appreciation for the
objects of their affection.