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5 Sep 2005, 22:06 (Ref:1399905) | #1 | |
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Best f1 autobiography...
Hey dudes....
im planning to buy an f1 biography (my 1st) just thought which ones you suggest i should take.... Drivers im interested in reading about..are: M Schumacher Senna (prefered if there is a good biography out there) Gilles Villenueve Niki lauda... There are so many books about Senna and Schumi i wouldnt know which ones are good and which ones are bad so.... and if there any other good driver biographies out there which are not in the list please mention... |
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5 Sep 2005, 22:15 (Ref:1399909) | #2 | ||
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Gilles - The Life of The Legendary Racing Driver by Gerald Donaldson is one great book.
Do get Perry McCarthy's "Flat Out Flat Broke" and Alex Zanardi's "My Story", two great reads! |
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5 Sep 2005, 22:21 (Ref:1399915) | #3 | ||
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cool man fan, there are so many great ones out, including quite a few autobiographies. Of those you mention above I can recommend Niki Lauda's two books on F1 cars which approximately cover his two stints in F1; The Art and Science of Grand Prix Driving and The New Formula One: A Turbo Age. Although they aren't biographies, so I digress.
I'm going to move this thread to Armchair Enthusiast where it will be better served. While you are there do a search for book and those drivers you mention and see what it throws up. I have never really found a Senna book I liked and I tend not to buy books on people until they have retired! There is an official Michael one I saw which is mainly just dodgy photos of him (the search will bring up a thread that mentions it). Villeneuve. A good start is the Driver Profile book written as part of a series by Roebuck. It is very good, but you'll have to find a second hand copy and be prepared to shell out for it. |
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5 Sep 2005, 22:27 (Ref:1399919) | #4 | ||
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if you want something other than driver biographies, look no further than Sid Watkins books - Life at the limit and Beyond the Limit
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6 Sep 2005, 08:21 (Ref:1400102) | #5 | ||
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If you wanna buy a biography of Ayrton, just buy:"The Life Of Senna: The Biography Of Ayrton Senna" by Tom Rubython. It's a biography combined out of a lot of other biographys about Senna.
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6 Sep 2005, 09:53 (Ref:1400188) | #6 | ||
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Tony Rudd - "It Was Fun: My Fifty Years of High Performance". A book that points out just how important engineers are in racing.
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6 Sep 2005, 09:56 (Ref:1400194) | #7 | |||
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Are you perchance implying that Mr Rubython didn't bother with too much original research? I LOATHE the Rubython book. It's reverential where it should be critical, hagiographic where it should be balanced, sentimental where it should be analytical, crudely, arrogantly anti-Prost, and written in the most overblown journalistic style imaginable. It's barely-readable mawkish drivel, inflated to three times its natural length by lip-smacking drooling over the accident. One of the worst motorsport books I've ever read. It's perhaps significant that it hasn't managed to get into paperback 18 months after being published. I'm no fan of Chris Hilton, but his books on Senna were infinitely better than this farrago of rubbish. |
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6 Sep 2005, 10:52 (Ref:1400257) | #8 | ||
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Further to the Rubython comment and as to why it's not made it to paperback - I have seen the backroom of a well-known publishers' wholesaler in the north of England, and it is filled with boxes and boxes and boxes of unopened Senna biographies!
I think the publishers overestimated its selling power just a tiny bit... |
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6 Sep 2005, 11:34 (Ref:1400313) | #9 | ||
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"All Arms And Elbows" by Innes Ireland as well as Donaldson on Villeneuve and the Perry & Zanardi books.
"The Unfair Advantage" by Mark Donohue is an excellent read, but does not really deal with F1. There are no good books on Senna and Schumi. Get the Rubython for the former just to get the story in one place. Best Lauda book to get a flavour of him (smoky bacon, probably) is "To Hell & Back". If you want to include manufacturers, you won't get better than "Cooper Cars" by Doug Nye. And you can't do wrong with "Racers Apart" by David Tremayne and "Grand Prix Requiem" by William Court to get the skinny on many lesser known figures. Court's writing style is almost pure literature. And neither are restricted to F1 pure and simple; Court's goes way back to Claude Loraine Barrow and the Race of Death. |
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6 Sep 2005, 12:39 (Ref:1400380) | #10 | ||
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Going back in time, try to obtain a copy of Duncan Hamilton's Touch Wood.
It is not all about F1 but is a great read. |
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6 Sep 2005, 16:07 (Ref:1400497) | #11 | ||||
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The chapters about his death and the aftermath in court are very long and dry, but also very interesting, full of facts that make you question the real reason of the accident (and no, it wasn't low pressure of the tyres or a broken steering column). I am not saying this is a brilliant book, because there just aren't any good biographies about Senna, just as ensign14 mentions. But it is not as bad as you want to make us believe. It is the most complete book about his life. |
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6 Sep 2005, 17:45 (Ref:1400592) | #12 | |||
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6 Sep 2005, 17:49 (Ref:1400597) | #13 | |||
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6 Sep 2005, 19:20 (Ref:1400676) | #14 | |||
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"My Cars, My Career" by Stirling Moss is not a conventional autobiography - more of an auto-biography, if you see what I mean - but very worthwhile. If only to marvel at the variety of cars driven by Stirling; the Vanwall and Mercedes everyone knows about, but the Leonard-MG and JBW sports car? (If I were to quibble, it does not mention the Audi touring car...) |
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7 Sep 2005, 10:51 (Ref:1401215) | #15 | ||
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I have a Senna biography written by Portuguese journalist Francisco Santos... and I wish it was translated to English for all you to see because I would say that's the best one on Ayrton. Its only faults might be too much passion at times, as Santos was a friend of Senna's and the book was written shortly after Imola, but it provides good insight into Ayrton without much BS...
I only have a Christopher Hilton book on Schumacher, written in 1994 riding on Schumi's WDC success, and well, it's alright. I would like to read a good book on Schumacher, but it seems the bigger the star is, the tougher to get a good book on him. Oh, and Eddie Irvine's Life in the Fast Lane, a funny read! |
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3 Oct 2005, 02:40 (Ref:1422424) | #16 | ||
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I have the Rubython biography on Senna and found it enjoyable to read. I haven't read the Christopher Hilton biography, so I can't compare on that score.
I have several books written about JV's first season and a bit in Formula One, which are quite interesting to read, especially now in hindsight, considering how his career progressed since the heady days of 96 and 97. Murray Walker's autobiography is extremely interesting and enjoyable to read. Fortunately, I was able to have the great man sign it when he visited Australia two years ago. I'd also advocate Tim Collings' "The Piranha Club", which could be regarded as a biography of Formula One itself. |
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8 Oct 2005, 14:39 (Ref:1427338) | #17 | ||
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I've just bought an almost mint copy of the Rubython book about Senna from a charity shop for £2.49, so I'm about to find out how good or bad it is. Not promising that the previous owner disposed of it so rapidly, though!
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8 Oct 2005, 18:36 (Ref:1427512) | #18 | |
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Well I'll tell you.
It is the worst book I have ever had the privilege to read in my entire life. Absolute miserable, appalling, fire-fodder. It does burn well, with a nice flame. |
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9 Oct 2005, 07:15 (Ref:1427875) | #19 | ||
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If it's that bad, perhaps I had better not read any further! On second thoughts, although I do tend usually to agree with you, Knowlesy, I'd better find out for myself.
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9 Oct 2005, 21:45 (Ref:1428833) | #20 | ||
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2.49 is about 2.50 more than it's worth. It's the most appalling piece of bloated, hagiographic, lip-smacking drivel I've ever read.
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10 Oct 2005, 11:41 (Ref:1429493) | #21 | ||
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Well, I'm certainly already fed up with reading 3 different versions of the same event, as the writer recaps in each new chapter, and it sure is long. Apparently, it started out as a 400 page book but expanded to 700 odd pages. I'm beginning to see why.
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2 Nov 2005, 22:52 (Ref:1450919) | #22 | |
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I read Graham Hill's book and I was in tears at the end
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8 Nov 2005, 09:36 (Ref:1455006) | #23 | ||
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Well, I've finally finished the Rubython book and I have to agree that it is not the greatest piece of writing. Written by committee, it makes Prost out to be a second rate driver until the tone softens after the reconciliation in late 93. Far too much detail about Imola 94 and particularly who was the first to know of Senna's death, what, when and where - all unnecessary and irrelevant. Still I did learn a few extra bits, assuming that they are 'facts'. However, if I was to start a thread about the worse 20 books, this would probably be on it!
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8 Nov 2005, 10:01 (Ref:1455015) | #24 | |||
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8 Nov 2005, 10:35 (Ref:1455048) | #25 | |||
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