Tells the story of each of the 529 races in which Sir Stirling Moss OBE took part, from the start of his racing life in 1947 to his career-ending crash at Goodwood in 1962. This title contains detail and anecdote, supported by photographs that show the greatest moments and the extraordinary variety of cars he drove.
Released in celebration of his 80th birthday, this fourth book in the popular series follows Sir Stirling Moss through his most turbulent, demanding and ultimately successful racing years. Moss's career was at its zenith and by 1960 he had secured his reputation as the greatest motor racing driver in the world - although the title of World Champion still, frustratingly, eluded him. He dominated ..
Celebrates motor racing, dating back to its origins in 1906. This book includes a structure, which allows F1 fans to see just how much things have technically changed over the years but paradoxically how many of the fundamentals of motor racing have remained unaltered.
A snapshot, in words and pictures, of the life of one of the UK's most charismatic and successful motor-sportsmen. 1961 was another brilliant year for Stirling Moss, beating the more powerful Ferraris in his old, less powerful Lotus at glamorous Monaco and the awesome Nurburgring. These two races rank amongst the finest Grand Prix ever. Moss also drove a charismatic Ferrari to his seventh success
Tells the story of the formative years of one of the greatest racing drivers of all time. Entirely based on Sir Stirling's own scrapbook collection, written memoirs and personal interviews, this is a unique insight into motor racing in the '40s and '50s.
Recent safety precautions have denied photographers access to the motor racing track (a track pass ). For many years this was not the case, and photographer Geoff Goddard produced hundreds of shots. This book records his photographs from Fangio to Stewart in over 300 black and white prints.
The story of Healey cars which are still highly sought after in Europe, the USA and Australia. Donald Healey started the company in 1946 and his son Geoffey went on to carry out the technical development work, being responsible for the prototypes and competitive cars.
This exhaustive history presents the entire Mercedes-Benz heritage from Benz and Daimler's separate ventures through their 1926 merger and the 1999 deal that created DaimlerChrysler. Foreword by Stirling Moss.