f1gear.com - all the online shopping any formula one grand prix motorsport enthusiast could ever want!
 Search
 Advanced SearchView Cart   Checkout   
 Location:  Home » F1 Books » General » The Grand Prix SaboteursNovember 20, 2008  
Categories
F1 Fan Store
F1 DVDs
F1 Video Games
F1 Software
F1 Books
F1 Toys
F1 Videos
Motor Racing Magazines
Motorsport Apparel
Car Electronics

F1 Resources
Formula One
F1 History
F1 Drivers
Grand Prix
Motor Racing
Motorsport News
F1 Calendar
F1 Collectibles
F1 Links
F1 Posters

Related Categories
• General
England
Europe
History
Subjects
• General AAS
England
Europe
History
Subjects
• General
France
Europe
History
Subjects
• General AAS
France
Europe
History
Subjects
• Intelligence & Espionage
Military
History
Subjects
Books
• General
World War II
Military
History
Subjects
• General AAS
World War II
Military
History
Subjects
• General
Military
History
Subjects
Books
• General AAS
Military
History
Subjects
Books
• Racing
Automotive
Nonfiction
Subjects
Books
• Motor Sports
Miscellaneous
Sports
Subjects
Books
• Paperback
Binding (binding)
Refinements
Books
• Printed Books
Format (feature_browse-bin)
Refinements
Books



The Grand Prix Saboteurs
The Grand Prix Saboteurs
enlarge
List Price: $24.99
Buy New: $17.28
You Save: $7.71 (31%)
Buy New/Used from $14.01

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars(based on 6 reviews)
Sales Rank: 104237
Category: Book

Author: Joe Saward
Publisher: Morienval Press
Studio: Morienval Press
Manufacturer: Morienval Press
Label: Morienval Press
Languages: English (Original Language), English (Unknown), English (Published)
Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 364
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.2
Dimensions (in): 8.8 x 5.8 x 0.9

ISBN: 0955486807
Dewey Decimal Number: 940
EAN: 9780955486807
ASIN: 0955486807

Publication Date: December 31, 2006
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Similar Items:

  • The Mechanic's Tale: Life in the Pit-Lanes of Formula One
  • The Chariot Makers: Assembling the Perfect Formula 1 Car
  • Cars at Speed: Classic Stories from Grand Prix's Golden Age
  • Flat Out, Flat Broke: Formula 1 the Hard Way!
  • Grand Prix (Two-Disc Special Edition)

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
James Bond meets Michael Schumacher The idea of racing drivers working as secret agents is at best far-fetched but The Grand Prix Saboteurs tells the amazing TRUE story of how three top Grand Prix drivers from the 1920s and 1930s worked for a clandestine British secret service in occupied France, during World War II. The product of 18 years of research, The Grand Prix Saboteurs tells a story that remained top secret until the British Government finally agreed to release them in 2003. The book dazzles with swashbuckling escapes, shocking betrayals and a story you will never forget.


Customer Reviews:   Read 1 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars An engrossing read, despite need of reediting.   August 4, 2008
I found this to be an engrossing read, in spite of the need of some reediting tweaks. As this book has only recently come out, after eighteen years or exhaustive research, it is understandable that much was missed in rushing it to print and surely will be cleaned up in subsequent reprints.

Regardless of editing flaws, and despite reading at times much like a numbingly detailed report and others almost like the work of Ken Follett, it remains always a most fascinating read. This book provides a unique insight into the British support in the recruitment and training of agents, as well as an examination of the activities and intrigues within the French resistance movement.

IMHO, this book should be included in every high school library, given the historical significance of the French resistance and the unique, often quite wealthy, individuals who paid the ultimate sacrifice for love of country.



5 out of 5 stars In Depth Read of resistance Networks   May 31, 2008
I found this book especially engrossing because it combines two things I am very fond of - history and motorsports. However, the fact that Williams and Benoist are Grand Prix drivers is more of an interesting sidebar; the focus is on their actions during World War II. During the war, Williams was sent to France to help set up resistance networks to foil Nazi plans and help the Allies win the war. Sometime these efforts were disjointed and other times successful. Nonetheless, they persist until they are caught and start all over.

The book is excellently researched and very thorough. The details of Williams and Benoist lives and actions during the war are well documented and I felt genuine sympathy for them near the end. The book is a great read for someone who wants to read about a side of World War II that isn't often told.



4 out of 5 stars 5 Star Topic Hampered by 3 Star Editing   January 23, 2008
  1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Joe Saward has done a great job of researching this fascinating topic area and it shows. This book is filled with details and information about the various people, towns, and events that surrounded these WWII secret operations. Unfortunately these details along with some questionable editing decisions conspire to make this 5-star topic into a 4-star book.

The book is written much like a report, which is fine. But beware that it is a dense report full of names and locations, some of which are critical to remember and others not as much. I don't feel that the author did a good job making the distinction clear to the reader. To further confuse the reader the author alternates how he refers to the different characters - first name, last name, code name, under-cover name, etc... This would have been fine if there were just a handful of characters, but in this story there are dozens upon dozens of names. Some of the detail seems superfluous, as if the author has done a "brain dump" of everything he knows on the topic, without always stopping to think if it is relevant information for the reader to know. I also felt the writing could have used another round of review by the editor. I found myself stumbling over run-on sentences and awkward phrases (e.g., "John had had a bad day...") which are acceptable in day-to-day speaking, but do not read well. When I finished reading the book the other day I was left thinking to myself how much better the book could have been if only some of these flaws had been addressed.

Criticisms aside this is a truly fascinating topic area - pre-WWII Grand Prix champs turn secret spies. The vast majority of the book (I'd guess 75%+) is devoted to the spy activities of the drivers, but the author does a good job of describing their racing careers.

If you are a combined racing/history buff then I believe this book is worth a read.



3 out of 5 stars More history than story.   December 30, 2007
  2 out of 2 found this review helpful

Is it a "bad" book? Not at all. The research and insight poured into this book is evident from start to finish. I was expecting more about the personal stories about these ex-racers and their wartime exploits, though. What Joe Saward gives us is more of a historical recounting of how these networks evolved and operated during the war. This is a book you will enjoy as a history buff, especially if you like to read about covert operations in WWII. It is not a light read though, and for me was not particularly entertaining to read.


4 out of 5 stars What Price Glory?   November 8, 2007
  3 out of 3 found this review helpful

Many years ago, as a post-graduate student at Bedford College, University of London, I often had lunch or tea with the History faculty and frequently heard the professor of French history, N. M. Sutherland, speak about a very clever student named "Joe" and learned that he was interested in motor racing. His full name is Joe Saward and his latest book brings together both interests.

The focus of the book is on "Williams", a Grand Prix driver of some significance in the 1920s, who became involved through the Special Operations Executive in Resistance activities in France during WW2 with the emphasis on his wartime activity and also upon those involved in the networks to which he belonged or with whom he worked. This book is thus much more of a history of Resistance activity than it is a book about motor racing, though not the worse for that, and it contributes to motor racing by showing that drivers and racing people are not one-dimensional but have lives that extend beyond racing, and some of them nobly so.

To me the most dispiriting aspect of Saward's very detailed account is how easily the networks were penetrated by the Gestapo and its French collaborators and also how totally inadequate security measures were among the Resistance/SOE networks. For example, quite inexcusably, radio operators were shared between networks thus insuring that when an operator was captured, as eventually almost always happened, and interrogated, more than one network would be eliminated in a single stroke. Saward also recounts how one Resistance member travelled with a written list of 200 agents on his person! He was caught by the Gestapo who then set about arresting all those on the list. As a result of these security blunders many former racing people were caught and killed by the Germans. All were brave and are to be admired, but I could not help concluding that much of what they undertook, pre-D-day, was of questionable value, especially the sabotage actions, given what it cost in lives. The acquisition of intelligence might have had some value, and would have been a better objective, but little was passed back to London that was of great significance. Saward does not really question, or question deeply enough, I think, whether what was undertaken was really worthwhile or worth the cost in human lives. In reading the book I could not find anything in the way of action that was significant; Europe was not set alight, as Churchill dreamed, but only a few small sparks set off. It seemed to me that the most important accomplishment of those involved in the SOE networks was not what they attempted in terms of sabotage, but that their commitment was testimony that not all of France would meekly give in to the Nazi/Vichy degradation. Get the book and see if you agree.


In Associaton with Amazon

All Trademarks and Copyrights owned by their Respective Owners. Not affiliated with any official Formula One organization | Contact: f1gear @ gmail.com