Laura Hillenbrand

From MEpedia, a crowd-sourced encyclopedia of ME and CFS science and history
Source: laurahillenbrandbooks.com

Laura Hillenbrand is author of two award-winning, best-selling books: Seabiscuit: An American Legend, about a champion race horse who became a national legend during the Great Depression, and Unbroken: A World War II Story of Survival, Resilience, and Redemption, about a promising track Olympian who suffered years as a WWII POW in Japan.[1] Both books were adapted into acclaimed movies.[2][3]

Since she was 19 years old, Hillenbrand has lived with myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS).[4] She is open about her illness, writing "A Sudden Illness," a poignant 2003 essay in the The New Yorker about the onset and her long confinement as she slowly recovered.[5] At the same time, when asked in a 2011 The New York Times interview whether she would ever write an autobiography, she said: "I have to spend so much time being vigilant on my body and worrying about my body and suffering. So much of my own autobiography would be about my health, and I don’t know if I want to spend myfessional life thinking about that. I write to escape my circumstances."[6]

Notable Quote[edit | edit source]

"Fatigue is what we experience, but it is what a match is to an atomic bomb."[7]

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