Veteranos y Clásicos
by Josep Vert i Planas
“Vert Carrocerias” produced passenger and commercial vehicles but it was after WWII that their interest in classic cars developed into a sideline that specialized in the restoration of what was left after the war had taken its toll.
Around-the-World Flights: A History
by Patrick M Stinson
It’s all relative. To an SR-71 Blackbird pilot who’s clocked 2000+ mph zipping around the globe in about 11 hours the 530-odd mph your average commercial jet achieves are boringly slow. Only 55 years before the fastest recorded SR-71 flight, pilots on the first around-the-world challenge (1921) were given 100 days to make the trip.
Mustang Genesis: The Creation of the Pony Car
by Robert A. Fria
Fria has the distinction of owning since 1997 the first Ford Mustang hardtop with a factory-issued VIN (5F07U100002) and fully restored it. That alone does not make him an expert, it’s the 10 years of research and the tracking down and interviewing many of the surviving players in the Mustang story.
Motor Racing: The Pursuit of Victory 1930–1962
by Anthony Carter
Slightly smaller than its 2005/2007 predecessor—and also slightly cheaper; not at all to be taken for granted—this new book dials the clock farther back, to the 1930s. More specifically, the 1933–1939 racing years and then, interrupted by the war and its aftermath, the 1950–1962 era.
British Warships in the Age of Sail 1603–1714: Design, Construction, Careers and Fates
by Rif Winfield
If all you know about sailing ships comes from the occasional pirate movie, the level of magnification this book and its two companion volumes bring to the task is probably overkill. Even for the fairly specialized reader these books are hardly casual reading.
The Magic of a Name: The Rolls-Royce Story, Part 1: The First Forty Years
by Peter Pugh
If you associate the name “Harold Nockolds” with a book of this title you are making the right connections but this is not a re-edition of Nockolds’ 1938 classic that covered the first 34 years of Rolls-Royce history.
Lady’s Men: The Story of World War II’s Mystery Bomber and Her Crew
by Mario Martinez
Martinez is the first to accept that his book is at odds, sometimes sharply so, with other accounts on certain vital points. Even so, his conclusions about an American bomber that simply vanished one night in the Libyan Desert in 1943 after its first and only combat mission have never been seriously challenged by anyone.
Engine Revolutions: The Autobiography of Max Bentele
by Max Bentele
This German mechanical engineer/scientist used extensive hands-on testing and mathematical analysis of the resulting data to systematically track down problems in engines and to analyze the viability of proposed new engine concepts. He became an expert in gas sealing, starting his jet engine education by solving the exploding blade problem.
American Road Racing — The 1930s
American Road Racing – the 1930s
by Joel E Finn
Finn has produced an epic work with this brilliantly written coffee table book is. It is, however, even more remarkable for its exhaustive research. The book covers the rebirth of American road racing which had become dormant after the early years of the twentieth century.
The Royal Air Force at Home: The History of RAF Air Displays from 1920
by Ian Smith Watson
In democracies the military is usually financed by the public in the form of taxation. Few people like to pay taxes, especially if the money goes towards something abstract or, in the case of military spending, something morally dubious.
A suitably rousing aerial display may change minds.
‘40 Ford: Evolution, Design, Racing, Hot Rodding
by Joseph P Cabadas
One can only wish that readers don’t pass this book by, thinking it’s about a model—iconic as it is—or a marque, or a period they’re not really interested in. There’s a whole lot more to this book, which is no surprise if you consider it in the context of the author’s previous work.
Sleeping Beauties USA: Abandoned Classic Cars & Trucks
by Bjoern Marek
Adding to the growing literature of photo documentaries about junked cars is this look at American (except for two) cars on—if not sometimes in—American soil. Written and partially photographed by a German journalist.







































































Phone / Mail / Email
RSS Feed
Facebook
Twitter