The winner of the 2010 International Automotive Media Gold Award, now available in paperback format. Though he is famous as one of Hollywood’s greatest actors, a world-class humanitarian, and the founder of the Newman’s Own natural food empire, the late Paul Newman had another intriguing and lesser-known he was an avid, successful, and well-respected car racer and team owner. In The Racing Life of Paul Newman , Matt Stone of Motor Trend teams up with Preston Lerner of Automobile magazine to bring you the incredible racing biography of a man whose serious racing days began at an age when many race car drivers contemplate retirement. It is the story of someone who entered the 24 Hours of Daytona at the age of 70 and made his last professional race outing at 82; whose roster of Newman Haas drivers reads like a who’s-who of open-wheel racing; and whose interest in cars extended from the likely suspects to old trucks and new hybrids. Newman is also the charming pal who, when a miserably wrecked Ferrari was dropped at his door by the incorrigible prankster Robert Redford, returned the favor by having the car, crushed into a cube, delivered to Redford’s living room. The anecdotes, the races, the cars— Winning contains them all, adding up to an award-winning and unprecedented look at Paul Newman’s racing talent, unwavering conviction, endearing charm, and enduring spirit.
This was rather dry and boring, but I suppose if you are a fan of both Paul Newman and auto racing you might like it better. He was too old when I was young for me to find him good looking (ageist? Perhaps, but I wasn't attracted to men older than my father and still am not). There were many of those inserts with blurbs written by various people who said--and I know you'll be shocked--nothing but good things about Newman. However, I am quite willing to believe he was as affable, friendly and hard working as people say, because some actors are like that, even a few big stars (perhaps more than a few, but I don't rub shoulders with them, so how can I know?)
Newman started racing rather late, but did well--not at the superstar level of NASCAR (people can call some of those drivers bad, but only the best even qualify, so it's all relative)--but at a professional level and he even had some wins, which is no mean feat.
Winning: The Racing Life Of Paul Newman is a biography about a man of many talents. It is written by Matt Stone and Preston Lerner. The book is about a man named Paul Newman. He was a philanthropist, actor and race car driver. This book focuses mostly on Paul Newman’s racing career through the accounts of others. He started racing when he was acting during a movie. The interesting thing was that he was very good at racing, he became a professional driver and was racing with some of the best drivers of the eighty’s. He went on to own teams and be big influencer in America’s open wheel scene. He won at Le mans all while acting for movies on the side. Anything with four wheels and an engine you can bet Paul Newman raced it.
The book overall is a very good read. The only real problem I have with it is the layout of the pages. You’ll have the book going on about Paul Newman. Then you will have a grey box that is someone's personal account on Paul Newman. I can’t begin to tell you how many times I would be reading a passage then I would turn the page and then read a personal account and be very confused. With that being said the writing, photography, and quotes from the book were top notch. I would honestly recommend buying a book just for the photos because they are just that good. My favorite part about this book was when I was reading about the height of Paul Newman’s racing career in the 70s and 80s. The writing was so descriptive I could almost smell burned rubber and the scream of the Bob Sharp Racing Datsun 280zx. All in all the only bad part about the book is how the authors interject personal stories onto the page. Everything else about this book was amazing.
This book was one of the best things I’ve read in a very long time. It told a great story of one of the greatest people to get behind the wheel of a race car. This book left me with a feeling of being able to accomplish anything. This is because Paul Newman wasn’t naturally gifted at racing, he worked his way up to the top and I really like that. I loved the whole zero to hero concept, starting from nothing and getting somewhere from hard work and dedication. If you are a fan of racing read this book. If you want to read about someone extraordinary life read this book. If you like photography by this book just for the pictures. This book will be one of my favorites for the foreseeable future and I hope it will be for other readers too.
Had I not won this book from Goodreads I probably wouldn't have considered reading this particular book.
I m an avid racing fan who had no clue that Paul Newman was actually a racing champ. This book is interesting for those who follow the racing circuit. I found the details about some of the various cars interesting and the business of racing fascinating.
This is a book about the racing life of Paul Newman. This was his second career and a constant in his life. Learn how Newman and David Letterman both had souped up Volvo Station wagons with Porsche engines to tool them back and forth to work. Newman was a Volvo and VW man.
Wonderful book about the racing life of Paul Newman, a truely great guy. I met him once when he was visiting Robert Redford. He came into a small old theater in Downtown Provo, UT. He was kind to all and very handsome. Great book and highly entertaining. he raced until he was 83.
An excellent look at the major aspect of Paul Newman's life. Yews he was a major Hollywood Star but it was the car racing, at any level, that seemed to really float Paul's boat. A latecomer to motor racing Newman took up racing after starring in 1970s Winning, by which time he was in his mid 40's. Not a natural talent Newman had was an extremely competitive person and worked very hard at improving his racing skills until he was good enough to race at a professional level.
This book is not a chronological listing of every event PLN raced in, but much more a look at the human side of Paul Newman, Racer. It looks at his careers as both a driver and Professional level Team Owner. The one thing that comes through it all is his desire to just be one of the boys, a facet of his life that he certainly acheived judging by the comments from all the people who contributed sidebar comments throughout the book.
A good read, though felt a little random in its organization. Stories of his racing were scattered all around the book with lots of repetition and timeline jumps backwards and forwards. They were always interesting, but you might be reading about a race he completed in the 2000s in one paragraph then jump back to the 80s the next. Its a little disorienting. Also its probably more a testament to Newman than the book but pretty much every single personal account said the same thing, he was a really great and humble but very competitive guy. Someone who was great to have a beer with on a Saturday night in the Paddock.
At the end of the book I know a lot more about his racing history but only a little about Newman himself. That's not a negative considering the intention of the book, but if you're looking for a more generalized biography look elsewhere.
Excellent book about the "other" side of Paul Newman's life. Many books have been written about his life and acting, but this is the first I know of that focused on his life in racing. As a fan of the man I found this book fascinating. How Newman could have become such an accomplished driver at such a late age can only be explained by his being "a natural". Many people are quoted in the book as wondering what he might have attained had he started at a young age like so many pros. They speculated that we'd know him as "Paul Newman the race car driver" and not the actor. Highly recommended to both race fans and Newman fans alike. Paul Newman was a wonderful role model and fun to watch on the big screen. I love how humble he stayed through all of that fame.
A wonderful rundown of what PLN (as his helmets and race cars referred to him) was able to accomplish in only 30+ years as a racing driver, team owner, benefactor and student of the game. It's full of anecdotes from legends (Andretti, Gurney, Rahal) and journeymen (Bourdais [but only because I don't like him]) alike who were initially star struck, but put at ease by Newman's being "a regular guy" in the pits. Likewise, they played down their reputations, and recognized in Newman a fellow competitor with uncommon skill.
Makes me wish I'd been paying more attention during the good old days of Trans-Am and IMSA. He won his last race, at Lime Rock, at age 82. Kind of amazing.