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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars winning: the racing life of Paul Newman
Just Finished this book. Great detail and rare photos of his incedible motorsport life. Having seen Mr. Newman race many times at Nelson Ledges, this book rekindled many fond memories. The book is a wonderful tribute to a fine race driver/owner and a great human being.
Published on October 7, 2009 by Thomas C. Kennedy

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars appreciative scrapbook, not an interesting read
Hollywood's attempts at portraying motor racing on the big screen have almost always fallen short. These films often have unrealistic storylines that revolve around cardboard characters, such as the aging champion looking for redemption or the young stud with a death wish. So if someone proposed a story about a 50ish movie star who takes up racing and goes on to win four...
Published on January 14, 2010 by Lee Robie


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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars appreciative scrapbook, not an interesting read, January 14, 2010
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This review is from: Winning: The Racing Life of Paul Newman (Hardcover)
Hollywood's attempts at portraying motor racing on the big screen have almost always fallen short. These films often have unrealistic storylines that revolve around cardboard characters, such as the aging champion looking for redemption or the young stud with a death wish. So if someone proposed a story about a 50ish movie star who takes up racing and goes on to win four national championships, finishes on the podium in the Daytona and Le Mans 24 hour races, and even wins in the Trans-Am series, you would probably say "get real."

That Paul Newman accomplished all that and more in a 30-year racing career begun at an age when most guys are retired is amazing - it ranks as one of the most incredible sports stories ever. Which is why I was so disappointed with Winning: The Racing Life of Paul Newman, Matt Stone's new hardcover picture and fluff treatment of Newman's racing life.

You won't find the inside story of what Newman did, and how he did it here. Barely half of this thin 175-page volume is dedicated to Newman's driving career. Winning is really an appreciative scrapbook, filled with numerous pictures and remembrances, but with no attempt to be balanced or to tell the whole story.

From the roughly 40 sidebars by friends, crew members, drivers, and team owners, we learn that PLN:
* was humble, and just wanted to be one of the guys
* wasn't a natural, but liked driving fast
* enjoyed practical jokes
* liked to hang out and be a regular guy
* was a real racer (as opposed to?)
Oh yeah, and he really enjoyed being one of the guys (you get the idea).

Newman's story deserves a serious, objective, thoroughly researched treatment. Because he started late in life, and lacked outsized natural talent, Newman struggled at first to get up to speed. In 68 Trans-Am starts he had only 2 wins but also 27 DNF's due to mechanical failures. He won four SCCA national championships but just missed six other times, finishing 2nd or 3rd. Winning largely ignores the low points, near misses, and heartbreak that are a part of any racing experience, and therefore lacks the tension and drama that pulls a reader in.

What I really wanted to know was how Newman was able to race (and win!) in his 60's, 70's, and even 80's? Was his vision and hand-eye coordination that good? What was his fitness regiment? How did his body recover from the pounding he took in a racing car? But instead, we get descriptions of various automotive related movies (including an entire chapter on the horribly unwatchable Winning), and a discussion of Newman's various Volkswagens and Volvo station wagons.

Also missing here is any in-depth discussion of the supporting players and their relationship to Newman. Bob Sharp - successful driver, team owner, auto dealer, and father of Indy driver Scott Sharp - is a fascinating character who played a key role in Newman's success. Sharp was an innovator with a flair for promotion (and deserves his own book) who ran the cream of American road racers in his cars. How exactly did he decide that 55 year old Paul Newman was the best guy to team with Sam Posey in the 900 horsepower twin turbo ZX? And why did he run 65 year old Newman in the Trans-Am (in an Oldsmobile) with little realistic chance of winning?

Along with Sharp, Newman counted teammate, rival, and fellow "old guy" Jim Fitzgerald among his closest friends in racing. Fitzgerald not "Fitzpatrick" as he is named on page 82) was an engineer who begin racing in his thirties and won more than 350 SCCA Nationals before being tragically killed in a Trans-Am race at age 66. "Fitzy" was four years older than Newman, and it would be interesting to know how these two very different men bonded and influenced each other. Also missing are the first-person perspectives of Newman's children, and of Joanne Woodward, his wife of fifty years.

Shallow as it is, Winning does provide some insight into Newman's ability and approach to the sport. Sharp, Posey, and others characterize him as slow in the beginning, clean, disciplined, unspectacular, but possessing extraordinary concentration that allowed him to incrementally improve. Trans-Am champion Dorsey Schroeder adds that Newman "wasn't good when he started [but] had the discipline ... to make racing the number one priority in his life." Newman generally had (and could afford) the best equipment and extensive track time, but it's also clear that he was very serious, focused and built himself into a professional caliber driver in a systematic and deliberate way.

Newman's three decades as a team owner in Can-Am and Indy cars are compressed down to 30 pages. He is characterized as the chief promoter and head cheerleader, with Mario Andretti adding that Newman was involved only in major decisions, was supportive of the drivers and crew, and used his celebrity to attract and mollify sponsors.

So the main reason to consider buying Winning is for the 200 plus images, mostly rendered in color, that dominate the book. This was a great period in American sports car and open wheel racing, and this beautiful collection of shots will transport you back in time.

Finally, I have to confess that I didn't really want to like Paul Newman at all. He refused to sign autographs, and seemed to almost resent his fame, except when it suited his purpose. He raced and won in everything from a 280Z to a Porsche 935 to unlimited prototypes. His home-made salad dressing turned into a hugely successful specialty foods company and charity. For fun, he co-owned a top Indy car team. And there's his day job as a movie star.

But I not only like him, I respect him. Paul Newman was an incredible guy - a hugely successful actor, racer, team owner, businessman, philanthropists, husband and father. I think that someone so focused on his on-track results, rather than on his image in the press, would have been very disappointed by this book.
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars winning: the racing life of Paul Newman, October 7, 2009
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This review is from: Winning: The Racing Life of Paul Newman (Hardcover)
Just Finished this book. Great detail and rare photos of his incedible motorsport life. Having seen Mr. Newman race many times at Nelson Ledges, this book rekindled many fond memories. The book is a wonderful tribute to a fine race driver/owner and a great human being.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Winning Book with Winning Subject Matter, January 19, 2010
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This review is from: Winning: The Racing Life of Paul Newman (Hardcover)
Only a couple times a year a well written and edited book on automobile racing comes out. For 2009 "Winning-The Racing Life of Paul Newman" is one of them. It gives a comprehensive overview of his racing life and how it overlapped and interweaved with the other passions of his life-acting, philanthropy, and his family. For the die hard race fan there will be photos and facts not seen before and for the movie fan a side of their favorite actor that previously was known, but not as detailed as it is in this book. It is an excellent read no matter from which direction you are drawn to the topic.
Buy it for yourself or as a gift. Neither party will be disappointed.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Form Over Substance, But Nice Nevertheless, January 31, 2010
This review is from: Winning: The Racing Life of Paul Newman (Hardcover)
I enjoyed this book as a pictorial homage to an all around good man who started his auto racing late in life, working his way up from cheap beaters to Indy cars. This is a pleasant read with pictures on every page and candid comments from people who competed against, worked with, taught and respected Paul Newman the auto racer. This was Newman's escape from the movie world he held in such low regard. What struck me was Newman's willingness to learn the craft through hard work and patience. There is still room for a more thorough study of Newman the auto racer and one hopes it will be done before those of us who remember him are gone.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars SpeedReaders.info Review, December 10, 2009
This review is from: Winning: The Racing Life of Paul Newman (Hardcover)
Winning, The Racing Life of Paul Newman
by Matt Stone and Preston Lerner

The terms actor, philanthropist, and racer combine to describe only one man, Paul Newman. Although he didn't begin his driving career until age 47, he developed quickly and competed into his eighties, eons beyond other competitive drivers. Written around the time of his 2008 death, this book focuses sharply on his racing career, wisely leaving his acting, philanthropic, and family lives for other authors and readers.

To many longtime racing fans, Newman seemed ageless, as if he had discovered some magic elixir that rejuvenated him every time he strapped into a race car. He drove mainly on road courses, everywhere from Nelson Ledges to Le Mans, but also on dirt ovals. He drove not only professionally prepared Porsches (the wicked 935), and Fords in the great endurance races but also karts and sprint cars, often just for grins. For multiple generations of American males, he was a hero. He may have been a Hollywood star, but at the track his humble "one-of-us" attitude meant that he was accepted by racers, who were unimpressed by other forms of fame.

This book's title comes from the 1969 movie that motivated PLN to activate his previous interest in racing. Mario Andretti, who raced for Newman's team for 12 seasons and knew him for more than 40 years, wrote the warm foreword. The book's straightforward text is dramatically enlivened by more than 40 sidebars by racing colleagues: Dan Gurney, Bob and Scott Sharp, Elliott Forbes-Robinson, Skip Barber, Dick Barbour, Rob Dyson, Sam Posey, David Hobbs, Tommy Kendall, Mario and Michael Andretti, Lyn St. James, Danny Sullivan, Christian Fittipaldi, Nigel Mansell, Bobby Rahal, Sebastian Bourdais, and several lesser-known crew members and journalists. In fact, to us, the great stories, personal feelings, and true respect expressed in these sidebars make the book.

One gripe. The book's designer unfortunately chose to set the text in a sans-serif typeface then screened it slightly, so the resulting slightly gray type can be subtly difficult to read. Luckily, the sidebars are in 100-percent black ink. In balance, the photography is excellent, and the personal race record and index make the book much more useful.

Author Matt Stone, who also wrote McQueen's Machines, makes the inevitable comparison between the two as drivers and describes Newman's work on several racing videos. Apart from Newman's own (pun intended) long career of competition driving, the book details his many years as a team owner, his voice-over work on the movie Cars, and even his souped-up personal cars. What comes through most clearly, though, are Newman's true dedication to and faithful love of racing, along with the valuable assistance that he gave, through his teams, to young professional drivers who would be around long after PLN left us.

Copyright 2009 Frank Barrett ([...])
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Winning: The Racing Life of Paul Newman, February 26, 2010
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This review is from: Winning: The Racing Life of Paul Newman (Hardcover)
This book is well written and gives an excellent review of racing machines as well as showing some of the lesser known sides of Paul Newman who has contributed so much to America besides his acting ability. Non-racing enthusiasts will enjoy the this book as well as those of us who enjoy and follow racing.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Winner!, February 3, 2010
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This review is from: Winning: The Racing Life of Paul Newman (Hardcover)
Terrific review and reminiscences of a racing career any racer would admire. A well done victory lap for a man who certainly deserved it.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A blend of sports history and biography perfect for any sports library, January 18, 2010
This review is from: Winning: The Racing Life of Paul Newman (Hardcover)
Winning: The Racing Life of Paul Newman is a 'must' for any sports collection strong in automobile racing. It tells how Newman entered the racing world, explores his partnership with Carl Haas that produced eight CART/Champ Car titles during 25 years of Indy car racing, and uses trackside stories and interviews with those who knew Newman. The result is a blend of sports history and biography perfect for any sports library.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Paul Newman wins, December 8, 2009
This review is from: Winning: The Racing Life of Paul Newman (Hardcover)
This is a nice little `coffee table' book, both if you are a fan of Paul Newman or a fan of racing; especially if you are a fan of both.
It contains Paul Newman's racing record in the form of charts in the back of the book.
Other than seeing the movie 'Winning' I really had almost no knowledge of his racing career. He did have the talent to race and win the respect of the racing community, which is shown in this book.
There are interviews in here of many in the racing world and celebrities that knew him in the racing world such as Robert Wagner,
The text seems to give a good and interesting history of his growing concentration in racing and his experiences. There are many pictures of his cars, Newman at the wheel and on the track. The time period covered is from his movie `Winning' through his voice over in the Pixar movie `Cars'. It includes the stories of his love of VW's souped up with Porsche or 350 cubic Ford V-8 engines and also of his modified Volvo station wagons with over 400 horsepower engines. It makes one smile to imagine the reactions of anyone seeing the performance and start ups of these `wolves in sheep's clothing'.
The book ends with his death from cancer at age 82.
It's a nice book for fans or a gift for fans of Newman or the racing world.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The Real Paul Newman, February 25, 2010
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This review is from: Winning: The Racing Life of Paul Newman (Hardcover)
Having been a follower of PLN'S recing career from down here in NZ, I was glad of the chance to get a real insight through this book. I already had "McQueen's Machines" by Matt Stone and when I saw that he also wrote this one I knew that it would be good and I have not been disappointed.
This is about PLN and his real passion,motorsport and real people.
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Winning: The Racing Life of Paul Newman
Winning: The Racing Life of Paul Newman by Matthew L. Stone (Hardcover - October 9, 2009)
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