Answered You can hire a professional tutor to get the answer.
Compose a 500 words essay on Sea Biscuit An American Legend by Laura Hillenbrand. Needs to be plagiarism free!‘Seabiscuit: An American Legend’ (Hillenbrand 2001), is the tale of a remarkable littl
Compose a 500 words essay on Sea Biscuit An American Legend by Laura Hillenbrand. Needs to be plagiarism free!
‘Seabiscuit: An American Legend’ (Hillenbrand 2001), is the tale of a remarkable little horse and three men who had total faith in him. The owner was Charles Howard (Hillenbrand 5) who first started out as a repairman who fixed bicycles. He soon became the largest dealer of Buick in the west. Around the mid-1930s,
he had become the owner of a formidable, fearsome racing stable. The trainer was a former mustang breaker and, Tom Smith was his name. He rarely said a word but he possessed an ability that was uncanny in which he was able to see into the mind of the horse. A man by the name Jockey Red Pollard was at the brink of becoming homeless when his path crossed with that of Smith (Hillenbrand, 49). Thus, together the three men formed an alliance that was unusual and unlikely. They dedicated themselves to showing the world what a bay that was undersized, armed with a champion’s heart could do on a racing track (Hillenbrand 2).
Just when Smith and Howard meet Seabiscuit so do we, as he is racketing at a racing track at Detroit around a stall. He was terrorizing the grooms as he fought his inherent and natural instinct to go for a run. Smith immediately sees the potential in the Man-o-war grandson who was runty (Hillenbrand 33). In Red Pollard, Smith also found a jockey who could understand the horse. Within weeks, Seabiscuit set out to do what he was born to do. He ran his first race under the care of Smith. At first, even Smith is not certain of the ability of the horse, until one glorious day when he clocks him on a track in San Francisco and he found Seabiscuit running at a pace set for world records. The next step was the Santa Anita Handicap which was one of the richest horse event and race in the entire world (Hillenbrand 62).
From then onwards, we follow through the career of Seabiscuit for the next four years both through tragedy and triumph. We are taken through the sidelining of Red Pollard because his crushing injuries who