The Caped Crusade, Batman and the Rise of Nerd Culture
by Glen Weldon
The Batman: Just when you think you have your Bat-Fix under control, another book comes along to let you know just how much more you really need. The Bat-Universe seems endless. This book adds Bat-Nerds into the mix and offers a new perspective on the heart of The Caped Crusader’s obsession.
Bugatti Veyron: A Quest for Perfection
by Martin Roach
The ultra exotic Veyron may cost £1m to buy but it cost way more to build. So what’s in it for Bugatti? And who are the people lining up to buy it? And what’s it like to drive one? All is revealed here.
Red Dust Racers
by Graeme Cocks
You may not have heard of the place—described in the 1920s and ‘30s as one of the best natural racing surfaces in the world and a history stretching back over 100 years—but you will have heard of the cars, mostly British and American.
The Fairey Flycatcher
by Matthew Willis
During the decade between the world wars the little Flycatcher could be found in many corners of the world but it cut its best figure in aerobatics.
Classics on the Street: An Automotive Odyssey, France 1953
by Robert Straub
A moment in time. And what a moment, in automotive terms. Postwar Europe was still populated with prewar iron—and much of it was irretrievably gone a mere ten years later.
Concorde: The Rise and Fall of the Supersonic Airliner
by Jonathan Glancey
You may have missed the memo but within only the last year two major initiatives have been launched to revive supersonic civilian air travel—forty years after Concorde first tested the waters. And we know how that went.
Bugatti; The Man and The Marque
by Jonathan Wood
Reprinted several times, this book raised the bar when it first came out 25 years ago and it’s still a, if not the, definitive book on the marque.
Legendary Corvettes: ’Vettes Made Famous on Track and Screen
by Randy Leffingwell
Only a handful of GM model names have lived longer—the Suburban (1935) and De Ville (1949) come to mind. The Corvette crossed the million-car threshold way back in 1993 and, with few exceptions, each new iteration adds to the luster of the name.
Bugatti: Le Pur-Sang des Automobiles
by H.G. Conway
A landmark book, not just for the marque but in the genre of automotive histories. In the 50 years since its original publication it has lost none of its luster and is, thankfully, still easily available in any of its several editions.
Tom McCahill on Sports Cars
by Tom McCahill
The acid-tongued Yalie took American automobile journalism to new heights and was unafraid to stick to his convictions: he preferred the Corvair to a Porsche—put that in your pipe, Ralph Nader. Here are 54 of his musings.
Rolls-Royce: The Post-War Phantoms IV, V, VI
by Martin Bennett
All Rolls-Royces are special; some are more special. Fewer than 1000 of these three top of the line models were made and this fine book covers them in the detail they deserve.
Fifty Sides of The Beach Boys, The Songs That Tell Their Story
by Mark Dillon
The flow of Beach Boys material is seemingly endless. Released during their 50th anniversary year it offers 50 essays for 50 songs. What is amazing is the amount of documented information found in the book—and the fact that this is but one small wavelet of the ocean.







































































Phone / Mail / Email
RSS Feed
Facebook
Twitter