Most Helpful Customer Reviews
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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The definitive treatise on a magic time in American racing!, December 16, 1999
Taken together, this book and Pete's "Can-Am", put a human face on this unique time in American morotsports. The cars were unlimited, the men larger than life. Pete's easy flowing writing style punctuated by previously unpublished photos and interviews allow those of us who were there to return, and the newbies to grasp the flavor of what they missed. The book fulfills the personal dream of one Can-Am enthusiast: to stroll through the pits of that golden era, camera and tape-recorder in hand, chatting with the greats and not-so-greats, with the knowledge of how it all turns out, and a historical appreciation of what surrounds me... The photos are breathtaking, and the interviews enlightening. Take this snippet from John Surtees, on his dice with Hall at Riverside in '66: "...the Lola worked well [on the straights], we were running minimum flap and things on it. So the race had that pattern: he'd out-squirt me coming throught the hairpin on the long straight, I'd get right in the slipstream, he'd drag me along, and then I'd have to try to out-brake him again. Oh, that was a good race." Or, this one from Jim Hall: "One of the beauties of being a race car builder in the time that I did it was the fact that it could be a one-man show. I could have ideas and produce them and go try them, and find out whether they were any good or not. I got to actually feel the car was better, and it went faster. That's one of the nice things about racing, that you get instant feedback." For those of us who were there, Pete has a gift for turning history into literature, heroes into persons, then into now. Thanks Pete!
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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
That rare sequel that's better than the original!, December 17, 1999
First of all, I have to say that I loved Pete's first book on this subject,"Can-Am". When I heard he was doing a second book, I was a bit skeptical. Was he simply milking the topic for a few more bucks? How could he top the original? Well, he did it! With its in-depth and very enlightening interview format (there's even an interview with Denny Hulme, done shortly before his death) and its wealth of superb all-new photographs, this book is a Can-Am lovers dream! Lyons captures the look and feel of the old, "real" Can-Am as we remember it, and as those who lived it remember it. My sole complaint: Too short! Tack another 100 pages onto the next one, Pete!
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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Men & Machines, December 21, 1999
This book is the perfect complement to Mr. Lyon's first book on the Can Am series. Rather than a race by race account, the book presents a quick season overview, a review of the machines of that year and then takes a focus on one or two personalities whose impact affected that year most strongly. Most of the material is new and it is fascinating. The material on Jim Hall and Peter Bryant alone make this book a must read for anyone who saw these cars race or wished that they had. If you're only going to buy one book, buy Can Am. If you want a broader view of the series, the men and the machines, then Can Am Photo History is the book. Together, they're an awesome set. As I spent many summers at Mid Ohio Sports Car Course watching these cars, the memories and insights into these awesome cars are irreplaceable.
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