What a delightful, satisfying book to accompany (or rather follow-up) a remarkable "non-award winning" series on the BBC4 digital channel, in which James May 'does what it says on the tin'. He does it in such a way that he can appeal to those who like things to say what they do on the tin, and those of us who enjoy rich language, wry commentary and feeling better informed about all manner of things. These types are not mutually exclusive, clearly: May exists. But the point is that you can have no interest or talent to put towards engaging in such projects personally to enjoy the book.
The book is different from the series in that it omits some of the finer detail of the execution of each reassembly and is essentially the engaging commentary he keeps up during the process. And the book is no iconoclastic rant - he's not reassembling, variously, petrol lawnmowers, monkey bikes, Kenwood mixers, electric guitars and more out of unalloyed admiration of 'the way they used to make them'. There's a fair bit of 'more than you ever thought you wanted to know' about, for example, screwdrivers, but you certainly feel better for knowing it.
In a disordered world, James May offers order, hope and satisfaction.