
| 1979 saw Carlos Reutemann move to partner Mario Andretti at Lotus as Jody Scheckter took his seat at Ferrari. Wolf filled the gap left by Scheckter with James Hunt, and McLaren gave... |

| 1980. The new decade brought a record number of entries for the start of the season. Expectations were high that the champions of '79, Ferrari and Jody Scheckter, could be beaten. Enter... |

| If you want to know what its like to negotiate with Enzo Ferrari, to chase Ron Dennis with a hammer, to score points when everyone knows you shouldn’t and to bring a... |

| This penetrating and dramatic account of a pivotal era in the history of Ferrari's legendary Grand Prix team centers around the relationship between Niki Lauda and Enzo Ferrari.... |

| For the first time, here is a complete guide to every circuit that has hosted Grand Prix racing since the Formula 1 World Championship began in 1950 – from volcanic Mount Fuji... |

| This review of a classic era in Grand Prix racing describes nearly 100 cars ranging from famous race winners to obscure models which were never raced. Also depicted are the period's most... |

| This is one of the greatest stories ever told – a century of men and machines pitted against each other, death riding at their elbow, risking everything to win. In this action-packed... |

| Grand Prix Driver by Driver is a comprehensive reference of every driver to have taken part in Grand Prix races and contains biographies of each driver. Also contained are key statistics highlighting... |

| Intimate portraits of 72 of Grand Prix racing’s greatest drivers from the sports’ greatest photographers, the father and son team of Bernard and Paul-Henri Cahier. ... |

| Christopher Hilton tells the dramatic story of each race that has clinched the World Championship since it began in 1950, right up to Lewis Hamilton’s thrilling showdown at the 2008 Brazilian Grand... |

| The Little Book of the Greatest Moments of Grand Prix written by motorsport writer and journalist Jon Stroud, is a collection of articles featuring some of the most iconic moments in motor... |

| The story of the invincible ‘Silver Arrows’ is an enduring legend, but who remembers that in the 1930s the cars racing under this famous name were massively promoted by the Nazis? Radio... |

| Di Spires is an unassuming Warwickshire woman who, with husband Stuart, travelled the world in Formula 1 for 30 years, worked with five World Champions and become 'Mum' to some of the... |

| This book gets behind the PR-speak to explore what Grand Prix drivers really think and feel. They talk with rare frankness of their hopes and fears, how they began racing and what... |

| To many enthusiasts, Jim Clark remains the greatest racing driver in history. Modest and gentle, yet charismatic, Clark had a towering ability to get the maximum out of any car he drove,... |

| This compelling book marries together a study of a great period in the life of Jim Clark with the history of a great British marque, featuring in particular the famous Lotus 25,... |

| Jo Ramirez is one of the best-liked and most respected Formula One personalities of recent years, and is held in high esteem both inside and outside the Grand Prix paddock. Now available... |

| Jochen Rindt was two people. To those he disliked, he was arrogant and dismissive. To those he chose to befriend, a warm, humorous character who liked to laugh and joke yet who... |

| Karl Ludvigsen's careers as an auto industry insider and motorsport journalist gave him rare access to auto racing's greatest drivers. In this series of lavish coffee-table treatments from Haynes Publishing, the author... |

| The Little Book of Grand Prix Legends includes key statistics about each legend, illustrated with some of the best known photographs of them together with a fascinating profile of their career. Featuring... |

| The 1970s was a great decade for British racing drivers, but it was also the era in which the nation lost a generation of brilliant young drivers - Roger Williamson, Tony Brise... |

| The 1970s was a great decade for British racing drivers, but it was also the era in which the nation lost a generation of brilliant young drivers – Roger Williamson, Tony Brise... |

| This is a comprehensive survey of Lotus's racing history, covering the extraordinary range of sports-racing and single-seater cars designed by Colin Chapman and his disciples. Grand Prix machinery predominates, with landmark machines... |

| The definitive history of one of the most evocative and successful F1 cars, and the first to use the Ford-Cosworth DFV engine.- From inception and development to the fate of surviving cars.-... |

| Conceived by Colin Chapman, the Lotus 72 is one of the most successful Formula 1 cars ever made. This innovative car – with its wedge-shaped profile, side-mounted radiators and inboard front brakes... |

| New in paperback, this is a book for fans of the golden era of Formula 1. Aimed at motor historians and enthusiasts, this is the first, and the last, word on these... |
| Every fascinating stage of the evolution of the stunning new Lotus Evora is explored in this fully comprehensive book, LOTUS EVORA - SUBLIME SUPERCAR. From its conception, through development, prototype testing, certification, production and... |

| By the mid-1980s, March Engineering was a dominant name in auto racing-of the the 33 cars to start the 1984 Indianapolis 500, 29 were built by March. Back in Europe, March was... |

| Eoin Young's anecdotal reminiscences about Bruce McLaren, his great friend and compatriot, will be compelling reading for fans of 1960s motor racing. Drawing from his own memories, interviews with Bruceys inner circle,... |

| Ayrton Senna was more than a great racing driver: he was a giant of a man who, 17 years after his death, is still mourned as no sportsman has ever been. Much... |

| When Denny Hulme won the 1967 Formula 1 World Championship, he jokingly asked Jim Clark to do 'the fame bit' for him as he so disliked being in the spotlight. Behind the... |

| Rare and dramatic images from the world-famed Ludvigsen Library evoke the drama of the W196’s races under the direction of burly team manager Alfred Neubauer, while Karl Ludvigsen’s intimate introduction and insightful... |

| Michael Schumacher -- the most successful Grand Prix driver of all time -- remained a quiet-spoken, private family man throughout his controversial career. The global celebrity was a global stranger. This is... |

| When Michael Schumacher retired from Formula One, battling to win his eighth World Championship, fans questioned how he, and indeed former team-mates and rivals, would react after the end of such a... |

| Here is the ultimate pictorial reference book on Michael Schumacher, the Grand Prix driver whose race record is unlikely ever to be beaten. From the author of Haynes’s best-selling Michael Schumacher: The... |

| Exquisite photographs, most of them published here for the first time, provide an intimate portrait of the Monaco Grand Prix, from the first race in 1929 through to the present day from... |

| The British motorsport scene has always been renowned for brave innovation and this was certainly the case during the exciting time described by this book. An enthusiast's reflective pot-pourri, in... |

| This book opens up the past, revealing unpublished stunning photographs from motor racing history, and examines the many facets of Grand Prix racing before the dominance of television. Here are stories of... |

| One of the fastest motor racing circuits in the UK, Thruxton is a supreme test of high speed skill – especially where the art of slipstreaming is concerned. Consequently, it is both... |

| The British public adored Nigel Mansell more than any other driver. When he was at his height, crowds at the British Grand Prix were bigger – and more fervently patriotic – than... |

| Since 1930, more than a dozen of books have been dedicated to Tazio Nuvolari, the legendary driver considered the greatest of all times. The 50th anniversary from his death, gives the author... |

| Packed with behind-the-scenes detail and stunning photographs, The Official Formula 1 Season Review 2006 is the full, in-depth story of the 2006 Formula One season, told by the drivers and team personnel... |

| Now in its fourth year of publication, "Official Formula 1 Season Review 2007". Here is the full, in-depth story of the 2007 Formula One World Championship, told by the drivers and team... |

| Now firmly established in its fifth year of publication, The Official Formula 1 Season Review 2008 is a must-have purchase for every fan of Formula 1. Here is the full, in-depth story... |

| Now firmly established in its sixth year of publication, The Official Formula 1 Season Review 2009 is a must-have purchase for every fan of Formula 1. Here is the full, in-depth story... |

| Now in its eighth year of publication, this is a must-have purchase for every fan of Formula 1. Here is the full, in-depth story of the 2011 Formula 1 World Championship, told... |

| Now firmly established in its seventh year of publication, The Official Formula 1 Season Review 2010 – in the shops just two weeks after the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix – is a... |

| This is a paperback edition of the biography published to great acclaim in 2003. Piers Courage, a rising motor racing star in the 1960s, was the first man to drive for Frank... |

| Races, Faces, Places is split into three main sections as described by the title, and travel from the late 1950s to the early 1970s - the heartland of motor racing nostalgia. Races: focuses... |

| The visceral sensations of driving a Formula 1 race car in the 1950s and 1960s are brought to life through the extraordinary images of the Klemantaski Collection (one of the... |