Archive for Author 'Sabu Advani', only excerpts shown, click title for full entry.
100 Years of Brooklands: The Birthplace of British Motorsport & Aviation
by Allan Winn and John Pulford
Commissioned by the Brooklands Museum on the occasion of the famed circuit’s centenary in 2007, this book tells its story mainly in photos divided into three main sections by type of motivation—cars, motorcycles, and aircraft
Monte Carlo Rally: The Golden Age, 1911–1980
by Graham Robson
Robson loves the Monte! Trained as an automobile engineer he caught the bug after watching his first RAC rally in 1953 and became a driver himself for various works teams, and was manager of another before moving into rally journalism.
La Carrera Panamericana: “The World’s Greatest Road Race!”
by Johnny Tipler
In 2006 and 2007 Tipler accompanied the Panam as a journalist, trading rides in the press van for the occasional hitch in a service crew vehicle, which put him about as close to the action as you can get short of participating yourself.
Races, Faces, Places: The Motor Racing Photography of Michael Cooper
by Paul Parker
This is the sort of book you pick up in an idle moment—and hours later wonder where the day has gone. Both in terms of photographic technique and storytelling there is much, much to discover here.
Porsche Moments: Photographs from Europe and Mexico 1953–1962
by Jesse Alexander
To anyone with a love of motorsport at the time we have come to think of as the sport’s golden age, names of photographers like Alexander are household names.
Porsche 718 + 804: An Adventure into Formula One During the 1.5 Litre Era
by Födisch, Neßhöver, Behrndt, Roßbach
This large and heavy book fills a gap in the panoply of literature on individual Porsche models. Maybe the reason for the previous lack of coverage is that these particular models had such an uncommonly short lifespan.
Walter Röhrl Diary: Memories of a World Champion
by Röhrl, Müller, Klein
“I didn’t really know why I was so fast and it didn’t really interest me.” Not exactly the words one would expect from the 1980 and 1982 World Rally Champion, a veritable legend in his field who was voted by his peers Driver of the Millennium (2000).
Yesterday We Were in America: Alcock and Brown, First to Fly the Atlantic Non-stop
by Brendan Lynch
“Yesterday We Were in America!” Imagine saying that at a cocktail party—in 1919. This is the phrase pilot Alcock kept repeating to the crew of the Marconi radio station near which he had landed, and who simply would not believe him!
The Silverplate Bombers: A History and Registry of the Enola Gay and Other B-29s Configured to Carry Atomic Bombs
by Richard H Campbell
Nicknamed after the codeword for the project, B-29 Superfortress bombers in Silverplate configuration were the first planes ever to carry nuclear payloads. Here’s the complete story.
Automobile Design: Twelve Great Designers and Their Work
by Ronald Barker, Anthony Harding (Editors)
The book is a collection of biographical essays of 12 designers of whose work the authors say “the current state of the art owes a lot to the knowledge which other designers have absorbed from them.”
Bristol Cars: A Very British Story
by Christopher Balfour
Bristols are rarely mentioned by people outside of GB and especially in the same breath with other luxury British marques. However the firm does rank right up there in the lofty heights as makers of hand-built, limited-production, super luxury machines.
Edoardo Bianchi, 1885–1964
by Antonio Gentile
Bicyclists will instantly relate the Bianchi name to famous professional racing and mountain bikes. Artists may remember that Picasso had a Bianchi bicycle in his studio and thought of it as “one of the most beautiful sculptures in the history of art.”







































































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