First published in 1973, The Way to Dusty Death is part of a series of unrelated novels featuring not one protagonist but featuring war, crime, adventure, derring-do, espionage and … death. It is a quick read full of action and larger-than-life heroes and baddies in the old style, i.e. good or evil, strong or weak, with few grey areas to make you worry about questioning their motives.
The book was written at a time when deaths among Formula 1 racing drivers were commonplace. Racetracks still had inadequate fencing (straw bales were still used on some tracks, I believe, or had not long been replaced by Armco barriers, which were considered too expensive); cars were still made from steel and aluminium, with no crumple zones; and they were fast but the handling and braking were not always up to the job. This only changed because British racing champion Jackie Stewart, after witnessing too many deaths of his friends and colleagues, was brave enough to go head-to-head with the sport’s managing body in public and set up a racing driver’s association to protest until some positive action was taken. Deaths in Formula 1 now are extremely rare, thankfully.
The author has taken the theme of driver deaths in F1 and adapted it to produce a story about a driver’s downfall: he begins to drink excessively, having not drunk at all previously; he is blamed for the death of another driver and his future looks bleak. The story twists and turns, there is a love interest, a naïve young man gets involved, and the main characters try to outwit each other until the dramatic climax.
I don’t want to give the game away but the story is exciting and unpredictable until at least halfway through, and then you still need to get to the end to see how it will pan out.
The story shows its age, in that the characters are a bit two-dimensional, the heroes being too heroic and capable, and the baddies pure evil. Some of the dialogue comes across as very old-fashioned by today’s standards as well, but don’t let that spoil your enjoyment of this thriller.
Three and a half stars.