This is the true story of three men and their dreams for a racehorse - Seabiscuit - which encompasses a pivotal moment in American history: its resurrection from the Depression. In 1936, as Margaret Mitchell''s "Gone with the Wind" was published, the habits of 19th-century America were finally consigned to history. In their place, modern America was born. But what defined this new era? Nothing more than the story of Seabiscuit, a stunted colt with asymmetrical knees that had for two years been hacked around no-good race tracks. Yet, by 1937, Seabiscuit could draw crowds of 60,000 and had more newspaper column inches devoted to him than Mussolini, Hitler or Roosevelt. During an appearance at the Santa Anita Handicap, his popularity peaked. America had gone to the races for the first time since the Depression and fallen in love with a misshapen colt of great character. Now it wanted a winner."Seabiscuit" tells the tale of one horse''s fluctuating fortunes, and the three men who devoted so much time to the dream: Tom Smith, a former Wild West Showman and Seabiscuit''s trainer; Red Pollard, who was abandoned by his poverty stricken family at a race track but became Seabiscuit''s rider; and Charles Howard, a pioneer car manufacturer in San Francisco in the 1920s who financed the entire project. These three combined to create the legend of Seabiscuit and epitomise a dream for the emerging new America.
Ficha técnica
Editorial: Harpercollins Pub.
ISBN: 9780007241743
Idioma: Inglés
Número de páginas: 453
Tiempo de lectura:
9h 22m
Encuadernación: Tapa blanda
Fecha de lanzamiento: 14/02/2007
Año de edición: 2007
Plaza de edición: London
Especificaciones del producto
Escrito por Laura Hillenbrand
Laura Hillenbrand es la autora de Seabiscuit, número 1 de la lista de más vendidos de The New York Times, con el que fue finalista del National Book Critics Circle Award, ganó el Book Sense Book of the Year y el William Hill Sports Book of the Year y que inspiró la película Seabiscuit que obtuvo siete nominaciones de la Academia. Ha escrito para varios medios de comunicación como el New Yorker. Vive en Washington D. C.