Laura Hillenbrand

Laura Hillenbrand is author of two awarding-winning, bestselling 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. Both books were adapted into aclaimed movies.

Hillenbrand lives with myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS) and is open about her illness, writing "A Sudden Illness," a poignant essay in the The New Yorker about the onset and her long confinement as she slowly recovered. When asked in a The New York Times interview the question so many fans (especially other people with ME) want to know, if she would ever write an autobiography to explain her experience with her illness, she answered: "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 my professional life thinking about that. I write to escape my circumstances."

Notable Quote
“Fatigue is what we experience, but it is what a match is to an atomic bomb.”

Articles

 * 2001, "Despite Illness, Author Pushed to the Finish Line" by Jennifer Frey of the Washington Post
 * 2003, "A Sudden Illness," by Laura Hillenbrand, The New Yorker, Jul 7, 2003 issue, "Personal history about the writer’s experience with chronic fatigue syndrome."
 * 2010, "Chronic Fatigue Syndrome: A Celebrated Author's Untold Tale" in Elle magazine by Aaron Gell.
 * 2010, "Laura Hillenbrand releases new book while fighting chronic fatigue syndrome" The Washington Post By: Monica Hesse. "Then there are the more recent wins. The time she managed to take an entire shower standing up. The time she and her husband, Borden Flanagan, drove to the alley at the end of their block so she could see something other than the cemetery behind their yard, and the time, a few weeks later, that they drove all the way to Starbucks. Sat in the parking lot. Drove home."
 * 2011, "An Author Escapes From Chronic Fatigue Syndrome" The New York Times By: Tara Parker-Pope
 * 2014, "The Unbreakable Laura Hillenbrand," The New York Times By: Wil S. Hylton "Since 1987, Hillenbrand has been sick with chronic fatigue syndrome, which has mostly confined her indoors for the last quarter century."
 * 2016, "Leaving frailty behind: A conversation with Laura Hillenbrand" by Paul Costello

Talks & Interviews

 * 2003 The Diane Rehm Show - NPR, July 3, 2003 with Laura Hillenbrand


 * 2014 'Unbroken' author's personal story of courage and resilience, Fox News Sunday, report by: James Rosen


 * 2016 Author Laura Hillenbrand: Leaving frailty behind, 1:2:1 Podcast

HHS/CFSAC

 * Public Testimony May 2013 by Reverend Bernard Hillenbrand, Laura Hillenbrand's father

Online presence

 * Facebook
 * Amazon.com
 * Website