This is classic Bill Libby: a thorough blow-by-blow account of the driver's career, but with an antiseptic touch. Yes, you will learn about Parnelli Jones. Yes, you will hear stories of behind-the-scenes hijinks and hell-raising. But Libby always seems so distant from the subject. It's like reading a very straight documentary, in which interviews allow the subject to characterize themselves rather to be naturally characterized by thoughts and deeds. (It's not 'The Right Stuff'; it's a 60 Minutes feature.)
It is not a bad book, but it strays from its subject - Parnelli Jones - frequently and will waste page after page going through meaningless details about old races. (Not the interesting details either. 'This back-marker retired on lap 10 with brake failure'; 'this one on lap 26 from overheating', etc.) Plus, I wanted to learn more of Parnelli's Baja successes, but this was published before they occurred. (Shall I blame Bill Libby for that too?)
I am almost certainly being too hard on the 'Parnelli'. I found the late chapter about the 1967 Indy 500 and the Andy Granatelli Turbo Cars to be enthralling, but I learned very little about Jones from it.