Формула 1 е скорост, блясък, опасност и огромно богатство!
Книгата „Жажда за победа: Хората, които създадоха Формула 1“ разказва как малка група необикновени мъже превръщат Формула 1 от нишов спорт, провеждан на примитивни писти, заобиколени от бали сено и тревни площи, в цирк за милиарди лири, чиито представления се изнасят в огромни храмове на забавлението по целия свят.
Начело с Бърни Екълстоун, милиардера директор на цирка, тази клика започва с изкарване на прехраната си, за да се състезава, и стига до създаването на автомобили от космическия век, превръщайки пилотите от гладиатори аматьори в суперзвезди за милиони лири като Айртон Сена и Люис Хамилтън, а имената на „Ферари“, „Макларън“ и „Уилямс“ вече са толкова познати по света, колкото „Манчестър Юнайтед“ или „Реал Мадрид“. В продължение на 20 години Кевин Исън наблюдава как тези хора действат като спортна мафия, защитавайки се един друг, докато се карат за огромното богатство, което се влива в спорта.
Този колоритен и завладяващ разказ за необикновения разцвет на Формула 1 изследва странностите и екстравагантностите на хората, които са се събрали – в едно поколение, – за да оформят своя спорт: коренно различни характери, обединени от това, че са състезатели, жадуващи да постигнат една и съща цел – победа.
A very readable account of the team managers and owners who created Formula 1, through sheer grit and stubbornness. A homage to the early engineers and ragtag teams of mostly men who would do what it took to get a car on a track and in the early days, a driver alive at the end of the race. This book made me realise how grateful I should be that my interest in the sport spanned the 1980's until the death of Ayrton Senna, a period when the independent teams could compete, massive technical developments took place and car safety had improved significantly before the arrival of big money which has reduced the competitiveness of the sport and the characters involved. Well worth the read if you have any interest in the sport.
This paperback book was sold for 20 CAD from the local bookstore. This was the kind of money demanded by hardcover versions of fiction, but it was worth every penny.
My favourite part of this book was the tributes to Bernie. I began following F1 in 2018 and caught up with F1 history by watching documentaries and past races, so I knew people like Enzo, Chapman, Tyrrell, Dennis, Williams, Senna, Prost, Schumi and so on, but it wasn't until this book that I realized the works of the group of Ecclestone, Mosley, and Montezemolo. The backstage stories like how Montezemolo transformed Ferrari by a all-or-nothing investment on Schumi, bringing in Todt, or the mischief and secrecy of Ecclestone's reign of F1, or the many many anecdotes that you wouldn't read in the news, made knowing F1 as a whole package much more enjoyable than simply watching the races and following the drivers.
A good thing about this one is that it is still fairly current. Published in 2018, the only F1 drama it missed was the 2019 season. 2019 was a good season, but compared to almost 70 years of F1 history packed into this book, it is not a major piece to miss.
The reader needs to be an F1 follower to enjoy this book as it follows no chronological order. The anecdotes are organized by theme. It is perhaps a good thing that this was written by a journalist, i.e. someone who writes for a living. The reader may not know who Kevin Eason is, but compared to a book written by a big name in F1 who is not necessarily good at writing, this book was more readable.
As a lapsed F1 aficionado (I was lured away by the greater excitements of MotoGP), I found this book packed to the gunwales with insights and touching anecdotes. With eminently readable prose, Kevin guides you through the adrenaline-fuelled history of the sport, but not in a predictable, linear way. Rather, he introduces you to the many and varied characters without whom we would not have Formula One as it is today. I would thoroughly recommend this to F1 fans old and new, especially if you wish to fill in gaps in knowof the history of the sport.
I should declare an interest: I was lucky enough in years gone by to meet a few of those portrayed within its pages, and I can include the author among my acquaintances.
A great book for those that watched Formula 1 for 30 or more years, like me. Great memories and a lot of info that was kept secret. The author had the opportunity to meet the main heroes of his book. My only issue was with the fact that the books focuses the most on Bernie Ecclestone and I was more hoping to read about the drivers. But certainly the stories in the book are very surprising and new for me, even though I am a F1 fan from 1985. A recommended read for old F1 fans that still miss the good old days.
Would not recommed to anyone. From the bad structure, timeline and writting to the ignorance towards important issues in Formula 1 to the celebration and sympathy to two bad men.
The only thing I enjoy about this is the new knowledge I'm gaining the rest is bad. You would find something just like this or maybe better on Wikipedia.
Why is everyone still celebrating Bernie Ecclestone, he told The Times, he respected Hitler, that's just a bit concerning. The moment women are brought up the blame on why we don't have enough women as F1 drivers is put on women not being good enough, no other reason. What about the Glass Ceiling, Glass gliff and in general the unwelcoming environment of Formula 1, which is dominanted by privilidged men.
The structure of this book is terrible, we are jumping from decade to decade in a illogical forme. The story telling is bad. This is not suppose to be about only Ecclestone.
Kevin Eason shows a lot of sympathy for two men who have caused a lot of harm and don't deserve to be as celebrated as they are.
Oft I find it so difficult to separate the quality of the book and the writing from the people the book is about. The book is about what it says on the cover: not the cars, not the technology, it's about people, and, in my opinion, Kevin Eason is really great at describing that second, more private layer of those who made the sport. He clearly knows them and shares this intimate relationship with us.
What annoyed me more (and that's my fault for expecting the book to be about different stuff) is that this is a book about a bunch of thieving ego-maniacs and how this boys club of creeps, manipulators and tax evaders got to make billions on thieving, evading tax and screwing people over. I just don't think that these men were worth my time and I don't find their stories inspiring in any sense.
( Format : Audiobook ) "They just go round and round." Kevin Eason reads his own book of, essentially, anecdotes about the people who have driven the world of Formula I from it's early inception to 2019. With Bernie Eccleston taking central stage, Eason travels around the big names of influence in a non linear fashion which is far more informative than a straight forward history of the sport. Fascinating and fabulous, this is a must for all fans of Formula I.
4.5*: Slightly outdated, but excellent collection of behind-the-scenes F1 stories that allows to gain a perspective how far the sport has come and how much the passion of every person involved defines the path and also the outcome. Makes one wonder what new stories of the last 6-7 years would author add to this collection. Brilliant read. Highly recommended to every F1 fan - be it a new or seasoned motorsport racing fan.
Formula 1’i Formula 1 yapan insanlar hakkinda harika bir kitap. Kapaginda Autosport’un “Surukleyici ve elden birakmasi zor” tanimi cok yerinde. F1’in basindan bu yana icinde olan karakterli, takim sahiplerini, onemli olaylari ve tabi Bernie’yi anlatiyor. F1 severlerin mutlaka okumasi gereken bir kitap diye dusunuyorum.
Whilst it doesn't go too deep, it's a brilliantly readable book full of some lovely and previously unseen (at least by me) anecdotes. It's a book of short stories really, but it is enjoyable and certainly a very easy read.
Eason has had an incredible insight and access to the F1 paddock over many years and this book is a comprehensive collection of stories from a bygone era. A truly excellent read for an F1 fan.
THIS BOOK IS SO GOOD. I was so sad when it ended. I don’t really know much about ‘classic’ f1 and I’m so excited to reread it after I’ve accumulated more knowledge since this book is so fact-packed that it’s genuinely impossible to take everything in. Such interesting insights and recount of events. Probably one of my fav books