About: The Life and Times of Kraft Dinner   Sponge Permalink

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Kraft Dinner, for those who have not yet heard the tale, is the name of the most famous racehorse-turned-detective novelist who ever lived. His story is one of the most notable and inspiring in the annals of American folklore. From 1956 to 1961 he won a spirited and heroic string of four and a half Kentuckistan Derby victories. A Triple Crown victor in 1957 as a three-year-old confirmed his place in history: however, a loss to Uncle Ben's Converted Rice in 1958 set up one of the most anticipated rematches in ’59. Kraft Dinner won by a nose in their second tilt. This unqualified legacy of success was shattered in a moment by a freak Chunnel-emulation syndrome accident during the ’62 Derby that severed two of the gallant steeds legs, broke the others and left his nose bleeding. Three other h

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  • The Life and Times of Kraft Dinner
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  • Kraft Dinner, for those who have not yet heard the tale, is the name of the most famous racehorse-turned-detective novelist who ever lived. His story is one of the most notable and inspiring in the annals of American folklore. From 1956 to 1961 he won a spirited and heroic string of four and a half Kentuckistan Derby victories. A Triple Crown victor in 1957 as a three-year-old confirmed his place in history: however, a loss to Uncle Ben's Converted Rice in 1958 set up one of the most anticipated rematches in ’59. Kraft Dinner won by a nose in their second tilt. This unqualified legacy of success was shattered in a moment by a freak Chunnel-emulation syndrome accident during the ’62 Derby that severed two of the gallant steeds legs, broke the others and left his nose bleeding. Three other h
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Revision
  • 1856372(xsd:integer)
Date
  • 2007-04-24(xsd:date)
abstract
  • Kraft Dinner, for those who have not yet heard the tale, is the name of the most famous racehorse-turned-detective novelist who ever lived. His story is one of the most notable and inspiring in the annals of American folklore. From 1956 to 1961 he won a spirited and heroic string of four and a half Kentuckistan Derby victories. A Triple Crown victor in 1957 as a three-year-old confirmed his place in history: however, a loss to Uncle Ben's Converted Rice in 1958 set up one of the most anticipated rematches in ’59. Kraft Dinner won by a nose in their second tilt. This unqualified legacy of success was shattered in a moment by a freak Chunnel-emulation syndrome accident during the ’62 Derby that severed two of the gallant steeds legs, broke the others and left his nose bleeding. Three other horses suffered from multiple flying limb contusions and compound stump insults rendering them as if they had been cycled through a tornado. The sport of kings cried out in dismay. The original owners threw away their stock. Theirs was a great mistake. The stage was set for the greatest comeback since W.C. Fields’.
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