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in the barn

The Hemi in the Barn: More Great Stories of Automotive Archaeology

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“Tom Cotter's sequel to last year's best-selling The Cobra in the Barn relays one great tale after another, with players unearthing rare cars to die for. The treasures include an armored Mercedes-Benz Aktion P command car discovered in pieces in Russia, a desirable Dodge Daytona Hemi virtually abandoned behind bushes in a guy's yard, a bushel of Bugattis in a barn, the ‘Divorcee Cobra,’ and a GTO owned by a mobster. These are great stories about great cars.” - Edmunds.com

“The book is highly entertaining, often exciting and should hold universal appeal for all car enthusiasts.” - Hemmings Muscle Machines

About the
It's every car lovers the perfectly preserved classic automobile discovered under a blanket in some great-grannys garage. And as Tom Cotter showed us in The Cobra in the Barn , it's a fantasy that can come true. Cotters' adventures in automotive archaeology continue in The Hemi in the Barn , with more than forty new stories of amazing finds and automotive resurrections. Avid collectors big and small recall the thrills of the hunt, the tips and hunches followed, clues pursued, the heart-stopping payoff. There's the forgotten Duesenberg--the only unrestored one around--that Jay Leno found in a Burbank garage. There's another 1931 model Dusenberg Leno found in a parking garage in New York City that was parked in 1933 and was never moved. There's a Plymouth Superbird found buried in a hedge out of sight in Alabama. There's the rescue of the first 1955 Corvette ever built. There's the find of legendary race builder Smokey Yunick's Boss 302 Trans-Am car. And there's the story of the original Cobra Daytona Coupe built by Peter Brock and sold to Phil Spectre--a story that somehow involves a chauffeur's daughter setting herself and her rabbits on fire. As entertaining as these tales are--and some are truly corkers--they're also full of tantalizing hints and suggestions for readers setting off on their own adventures in automotive archaeology. 

Chapter 1: Exotic Destinations
Chapter 2: The Find Next Door
Chapter 3: Rare Finds
Chapter 4: Stranger Than Fiction
Chapter 5: The Luck of the Car Hunters
Chapter 6: Family Jewels
Chapter 7: Playboys, Princesses, and Spies
Top 20 Barn-Finding Tips See Tom Cotter, author of Motorbooks “In the Barn” series, interviewed by Jay Leno on

256 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 2007

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44 people want to read

About the author

Tom Cotter

34 books11 followers

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Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews
Profile Image for William Jack.
Author 12 books15 followers
September 5, 2018
If you like cars (restoring old ones, specifically, but not at all limited to that), if you like quests with surprises and disappointments, and if you like witty, snappy writing, you might like this book. I did.
58 reviews1 follower
March 4, 2021
Neat little collection of stories documenting automotive finds. Some more exciting than others, but still of interest to all us car nuts. The history behind some of these discoveries is amazing. Pete Brock’s story on the Daytona Coupe, was fantastic! Other highlights include the Shakespeare Bugattis and the Herbie Hancock Cobra.
Profile Image for Will.
22 reviews1 follower
December 6, 2012
I love these kinds of stories, even if the specific cars aren't ones I would want to collect. I intend to own & read all of this series.

For this particular book, I have to say that the Aktion P story would make an awesome movie!

The only negative thing I have to say is that most of these archaeolgists have loads of money, so I feel a distance between them and I. For instance, the storyteller seems surprised that the Buick offered on ebay for $55,000 failed to get a single bid. Nevermind that the car may be worth twice that in the right place- how many people really have an extra $55,000 to spend?
2 reviews
May 13, 2024
More great stories about cars being saved from the forgotten folds of time. If you're a car buff, this is for you!
338 reviews
April 14, 2011
This book was loaned to me by the bartender at my local hang out. At first glance, I thought I would flip through it in an hour than politely return it to him. But, once I started, I was hooked on the interesting automotive history and the surprisingly poignant narratives of "car-guys" on the search for a great find, especially in the chapter about men who tracked down the first cars they owned as teenagers. On a personal level, it helped me remember the hours I sat in garage with my dad when he was puttering around with the Austin Healey he restored.
4 reviews
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December 20, 2008
Good book. Numerous short stories about people looking for interesting cars in barns, fields and other lost places.
Profile Image for Jonathan.
294 reviews3 followers
August 6, 2010
I like stories about find old cars in odd places. Second book on the subject by Cotter, he is a good story teller.
Profile Image for Bennett Cobban.
1 review1 follower
October 31, 2012
Decent Book. Had to Read something for school, So I Thought I might as well read about something that I Love... Car's. There Are A bunch of great short stories in here. Easy Short Read's. Have fun!
Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews

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