<p><strong><em>Black Beauty</em> is a novel that changed our world.</strong> Intended to ¿induce kindness¿ in a Victorian audience who relied on horses for transport, travel and power, it remains a dearly loved children¿s classic. <em>Writing Black Beauty</em> is the story of the remarkable woman who wrote this phenomenal book.</p><p>Born in 1820 to a young Quaker couple, Anna Sewell grew up in poverty in London. She was 14 when she fell and injured her ankle, leaving her permanently disabled. Rejecting the limitations that Victorian society forced on disabled people, she developed an extraordinary empathy with horses, learning to ride side-saddle and drive a small carriage.</p><p>Rebellious and independent-minded, Anna left the Quaker movement as a young woman but remained close friends with the women writers and abolitionists who had been empowered by its liberal principles. It was not until she became terminally ill, aged 51, that she wrote her own book. It was published in 1877, bu