Seabiscuit
An American Legend
From Amazon.com:
He didn't look like much. With his smallish stature,
knobby knees, and slightly crooked forelegs, he
looked more like a cow pony than a thoroughbred.
But looks aren't everything; his quality, an admirer
once wrote, "was mostly in his heart."
Laura Hillenbrand tells the story of the horse who
became a cultural icon in Seabiscuit: An American
Legend.
Seabiscuit rose to prominence with the help of
an unlikely triumvirate: owner Charles Howard, an
automobile baron who once declared that "the
day of the horse is past"; trainer Tom Smith,
a man who "had cultivated an almost mystical
communication with horses"; and jockey Red
Pollard, who was down on his luck when he charmed
a then-surly horse with his calm demeanor and a
sugar cube.
Hillenbrand details the ups and downs of "team
Seabiscuit," from early training sessions to
record-breaking victories, and from serious injury
to "Horse of the Year"--as well as the
Biscuit's fabled rivalry with War Admiral. She also
describes the world of horseracing in the 1930s,
from the snobbery of Eastern journalists regarding
Western horses and public fascination with the great
thoroughbreds to the jockeys' torturous weight-loss
regimens, including saunas in rubber suits, strong
purgatives, even tapeworms.
Along the way, Hillenbrand paints wonderful images:
tears in Tom Smith's eyes as his hero, legendary
trainer James Fitzsimmons, asked to hold Seabiscuit's
bridle while the horse was saddled; critically injured
Red Pollard, whose chest was crushed in a racing
accident a few weeks before, listening to the San
Antonio Handicap from his hospital bed, cheering
"Get going, Biscuit! Get 'em, you old devil!";
Seabiscuit happily posing for photographers for
several minutes on end; other horses refusing to
work out with Seabiscuit because he teased and taunted
them with his blistering speed.