Synopses & Reviews
In 1999, the Formula 1 World Championship is 50 years old. Here Nigel Roebuck, rated by many fans as the finest F1 writer in the world, presents his personal selection of highlights from the past half century, filled with his own memories and colorful anecdotes. Roebuck looks at key events including the first World Championship GP at Silverstone in 1950; the arrival of Lotus in F1 in 1960; Ferraris year of trauma in 1982; Damon Hills heavy weather championship in 1996; Ayrton Sennas tragic death at Imola in 1994; Mika Hakkinen vs Michael Schumacher in 1998; and much more.
Also contains pen portraits of racing legends Moss, Stewart, Senna, Prost, Ecclestone, Williams and Watkins. Well done!
Synopsis
In 1999, the Formula 1 World Championship celebrates its 50th anniversary. Nigel Roebuck, regarded by many fans as the finest F1 writer in the world, shares a personal selection of highlights from the past half- century, many of them his own memories. Colorful anecdotes and human interest stories populate the bios of personalities like Stirling Moss, Jackie Stewart, Ayrton Senna, Alain Prost, Bernie Ecclestone, and Frank Williams, as well as narratives of such keynote events as the first world championship Grand Prix at Silverstone in 1950, the arrival of Lotus in 1960, Ferrari's traumatic 1982 season, Sennas fatal 1994 crash, and Hakkinen's epic championship battle with Schumacher in 1998.
About the Author
Nigel Roebuck (born in 1946, in Manchester, Lancashire, England) is an English journalist. Since 1971 he has reported on Formula One, and is considered one of the sport's most influential writers. Roebuck continues to write for Autosport, plus Autoweek in the USA and a retrospective column in Motorsport magazine. His flowing, laconic and self effacing style is matched only by its insightfulness, honesty and humor, and occasional, heavy-handed reference to UK party politics. In 1982 Roebuck drove a Formula One Renault turbo at Circuit Paul Ricard in France.