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In 1987 Laura Hillenbrand went out to a restaurant for lunch. That
night the college sophomore curled up in pain on her bed from severe
food poisoning. Her active life of straight-A school work, horseback
riding, and competitive swimming came to a sudden end. To this day
Hillenbrand is often bed-ridden; staring at the ceiling as she copes
with the chronic fatigue syndrome that threatens to derail her dreams.
Hillenbrand
turned to writing, something she always loved. She fought mental
exhaustion, recurring headaches, and vertigo by closing her eyes
as she wrote long hand. She became a freelance magazine journalist,
often covering horse racing from her bed. The physical freedom and
beauty of a racehorse in full gallop gave her keen mind liberty
of thought.
Then
she heard the story of Seabiscuit. Seabiscuit was a horse born from
a line of champions. Yet physical limitations thwarted his success.
He was considered damaged goods. His front legs never got out straight
in front of him. One back leg whipped out to the side like he was
swatting flies in mid-stride. He was small and lazy, sleeping long
hours. And he ate, well, …like a horse. His violent temper
made him nearly impossible to ride. He won a few low level races,
but his high-maintenance personality and obvious lack of natural
gifts convinced professional horse-people he wasn’t worth
extra effort.
Yet
this misunderstood and mishandled thoroughbred became a cultural
icon. In 1938 he was the most famous news story in America. Beaten
up and dismissed, Seabiscuit’s resilience transformed everyone
near him and inspired a nation. Hillenbrand wanted to write a book
on Seabiscuit, but the historical research would be a monumental
task for a writer in good health. For Hillenbrand, it would require
an act of pure will. But the story obsessed her; more importantly,
it inspired her. She decided to write it, secretly hoping to sell
5000 copies.
Hillenbrand
wrote a book proposal and found a literary agent to shop it around
publishers. The agent, armed with only the proposal, got Random
House to commit. Then came the unexpected. Within days of landing
a publisher, Laura received a phone call from a “very famous”
Hollywood producer. Her proposal had created so much buzz in the
East coast publishing circles that Universal and Larger Than Life
productions wanted to option her book for a movie. Seabiscuit had
inspired millions during the depression, a time of economic insecurity
at home and rising terror abroad. The marketing pros saw dollar
signs, hoping Seabiscuit’s magic might work today.
Hillenbrand
had a refrigerator put near her bed so she didn’t have to
waste energy going to the kitchen to get food. She used the internet
to collect every scrap of research she could find, logging on eBay
to buy old horse racing memorabilia and news clippings. Research
piled high, always within her reach to limit the physical demands
on her. She interviewed hundreds of leads using her bedroom phone,
and transcribed the recordings herself. She spent four years writing
Seabiscuit, An American Legend.
The
hardcover remained on the New York Times Bestseller List for over
a year, selling three million copies. The paperback is still on
the list. The movie opened last week to positive reviews. It grossed
22.1 million on its opening weekend. Many in Hollywood see it is
one of the movies to beat for the upcoming academy awards.
Both
the book and the movie open with Charles Howard, a bicycle repairman
turned car tycoon. Howard lost his love for cars following the death
of his young son in an automobile accident, for which he blamed
himself. His wife, unable to forgive him, filed for divorce. His
loss enhanced his empathy for others in pain. Fighting cynicism,
he continued to see the potential in others regardless of their
obvious limitations. This is a gift few have. Most of us see the
limitations in others while blind to their potential.
Howard
teamed up with Thomas Smith, a mustang breaker who never lost his
love for horses. America was embracing the horseless carriage, a
modern contraption of sleek but soulless efficiency. Smith kept
to where the horses were still valued; racetracks. There he meet
Red Pollard. Abandoned by his parents at a makeshift race track
in Montana, Red scratched out an existence as an oversized jockey
by day and undersized prize-fighter by night. It would be hard to
say which of these three had experienced more upheaval and suffering
in their lives.
Smith,
Howard, and Pollard formed an unlikely alliance that transformed
Seabiscuit into a sports legend. Yet it was the horse that transformed
these men and inspired a depressed America.
Howard
saw in Seabiscuit not an efficient running machine like the automobiles
beginning to crowd city streets, but a flawed creature with a fierce
determination to excel. Seabiscuit wanted to run and to run fast.
His speed came from his heart and his head, not his legs. In his
mind he was Pegasus. All other horses would have to catch him.
He
won race after race. Howard challenged the East coast racing establishment
to a match; Seabiscuit against Triple Crown winner War Admiral.
Just before the race Red suffered a multiple fracture of his leg
and collar bone in a riding accident. Red insisted that George Woolf,
America’s most famous jockey, take the mount in his place.
The
downtrodden in America, those in need of another chance, rooted
for Seabiscuit. They resented the East coast banking aristocracy
who considered horse racing an elitist sport. The infield swelled
with tens of thousands of fans cheering for Seabiscuit to upset
War Admiral. They wanted to believe that in America the underdog,
awkward and maligned, could win against the most prominent symbol
of elitist snobbery.
Seabiscuit
beat War Admiral by four lengths, setting a track record. Today,
many horse racing enthusiasts consider that race to be the greatest
in American history.
Heart
is more than winning; it is trying when counted out. Seabiscuit
represents the struggle between the idealized dreams held in the
mind and the limitations of physicality, will, and spirit.
This
is especially true for Laura Hillenbrand, whose own fortitude and
courage in telling this story has inspired millions.

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