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 Location:  Home » F1 Books » Classic Cars » The Cruel Sport: Grand Prix Racing 1959-1967December 2, 2008  
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The Cruel Sport: Grand Prix Racing 1959-1967
The Cruel Sport: Grand Prix Racing 1959-1967
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List Price: $50.00
Buy New: $31.40
You Save: $18.60 (37%)
Buy New/Used from $29.35

Avg. Customer Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars(based on 10 reviews)
Sales Rank: 74404
Category: Book

Author: Robert Daley
Publisher: Motorbooks
Studio: Motorbooks
Manufacturer: Motorbooks
Label: Motorbooks
Languages: English (Original Language), English (Unknown), English (Published)
Media: Hardcover
Edition: 1st
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 240
Shipping Weight (lbs): 3.7
Dimensions (in): 12.1 x 9.1 x 1

ISBN: 0760321000
Dewey Decimal Number: 796.72
EAN: 9780760321003
ASIN: 0760321000

Publication Date: April 23, 2005
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

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  • Le Mans '55: The Crash That Changed the Face of Motor Racing
  • Vintage American Road Racing Cars, 1950-1970

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Robert Daley. It was an era of daring, dashing drivers piloting incredibly powerful race cars around fast and legendary circuits with only primitive safety equipment to spare them disaster. The book includes sections covering the drivers, cars, factories, practice sessions, race day races and, inevitably, accidents. The text is incredibly compelling, as would be expected from a world-class writer. The design and photo presentation remain true to the original edition, published in 1963, and are supplemented by a new introduction and epilogue and revised captions. A rare period piece certain to delight racing fans.



Customer Reviews:   Read 5 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars Good book with a lot of pics and good text to read   October 22, 2008
This book contains a lot of interesting and good pics about the 'gold age' of F1. It has also a text to read, not just some comments under each photo.

The book is divided in chapters, focused on the different aspects of GP: "the driver", "the car", "the race" and so on.

Personally I prefer "Cars at Speed", written by Robert Daley also, as it's a better read, more focused on text than this one.

Anyway this is a good book for any motorsport fan, even more if it's interested on that age.

Regards



5 out of 5 stars Worth the price of admission   October 1, 2008
I was in my early teens in the years covered in this book and the participants covered were heroes to me. I came across this title reading an obit for Phil Hill and went to Amazon to see what the general consensus was on the book. I read the reviews and ordered it and I agree wholeheartedly that it deserves five stars. This being an opinion from someone who was familiar with the drivers and the era covered in the book so the nostalgia factor influenced this review. YMMV.


5 out of 5 stars Inside the High Stakes Game that was F1   March 24, 2007
Being born in 1982, I wasn't around for this era of Grand Prix racing. Sure, I'd heard the stories about how dangerous a period it was and how drivers put it all on the line every time they got in a car. However, this book made it clear just how dangerous Grand Prix racing - and all motorsport for that matter, was. The driver biographies are certainly not full length, but they provide a snapshot of what was going through the driver's minds when they were racing. I enjoyed Phil Hill's comments, especially the statements talking about Enzo Ferrari.

Above all, this is a picture book. That is not a negative to the book though, it is the main feature. The photographs were all taken by the author through the course of his covering F1 during that era as a writer/photographer.



5 out of 5 stars Very interesting book.   March 8, 2007
This is one of those books that I read cover to cover within hours of receiving it. It tells the amazing story of early Grand Prix racing. After reading it, it really had me wondering why anybody would have been a driver back then. Too many drivers died while racing, and this book has these stories in photographs. In the book, Daley's articles on Alfonso de Portago and Wolfgang von Trips are excellent.

I really enjoy this book and would recommend it to anybody who is a fan of the old Grand Prix era.



5 out of 5 stars An Often Cruel Sport It Was   February 15, 2007
I picked up an original copy of Daley's book, The Cruel Sport, many years ago. The 1st edition was a milestone in motorsports writing, for it without reservation addressed racing's rather dirty little secret- drivers were needlessly dying at the wheel of fragile cars at incredibly unsafe tracks that in turn were run by owners / organizations that were too often criminally negligent when it came to basic safety precautions. Scores of drivers, both then and now in well-earned retirement (if lucky enough to have survived), talked about how dangerous the sport was, but there was no concensus among drivers as to how to proceed. Circuit owners more often than not did not want to discuss their role in improving track safety. Long after the printing of Daley's original book, drivers were still paying the ultimate price for someone else's shortsightedness- Jochen Rindt, Roger Williamson, Tom Pryce, Jim Clark, Bruce McLaren, etc. Those drivers that did champion for change (Stewart, Rindt, Bonnier, G. Hill, etc) were often ridiculed for their efforts. The current crop of safer drivers and fans (remember LeMans '55!!) have these pioneers, and Daley, as the author of The Cruel Sport, to thank for their willingness to expose what was going on. Far from a reprint, the new edition is sufficiently revamped and updated to make it an entirely new read. Daley's photos still hold up well against the best of the big-time professionals of his era. If you love F-1 from the 1960s, this is an essential book for your library; in no way will you be disappointed. As the author of many titles unrelated to motorsports, you'll also be impressed with Daley's enormous talent for painting a picture with words- if only more motorsports writers were half as talented. To think these 3 1/2 decades later, there is still no similar work in motorsports literature.

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