One might have some preconceived notations about what a memoir written by Dale Earnhardt Jr about first season and NASCAR would be like... and for the most part this book is those things, but what makes it great is that Earnhardt doesn't shy away from them he leans in. Yes sometimes the way he views women is... not the best, and he straight up just mailed in a couple chapters buts it really does feel like him. He is willing to look a stupid redneck, or a spoiled kid, but he's also willing to stand up against social norms he doesn't agree with, and go out and do things not normally associated with a NASCAR driver. In short he is willing to vulnerable, to be himself, and in doing so you get a great look into the man that is Dale Earnhardt Jr. for all the good, and the bad. I haven't watch NASCAR since I was a kid and even then I wasn't much of a Junior fan, but I really did enjoy this book.
If your looking for an in-depth look into the workings of NASCAR this isn't for you, if you are looking for some thought-provoking memoir this book isn't for you. If you want a nice, calm, relaxing, cheerful read this is the book for you. In someway that's part of the reason I like it so much, that lighthearted cheerfulness it just feels like its missing from todays society. There were multiple points when reading when I just thought to myself - this book is from a different time, you could never write this book today, and not because it is controversial but for almost the exact opposite. He is just so neutral and amicable. He doesn't want to play politics, he just wants to drive around and do what he loves and enjoys. I think at one point he even talks about politics in racing as something he was 'happy to leave to the old guys'. It just felt refreshing and nice like something from the past that we've left behind. I was a fan of the book. If you read I hope you are too...