by RichardWilliams (Author)
The 1957 Pescara Grand Prix marked the end of an era in motor racing. Sixteen cars and drivers raced over public roads on the Adriatic coast in a three-hour race of frightening speed and constant danger. Stirling Moss won the race, beating the great Juan Manuel Fangio (in his final full season) and ending years of supremacy by the Italian teams of Ferrari and Maserati. Richard Williams brings this pivotal race back to life, reminding us of how far the sport has changed in the intervening fifty years. The narrative includes testaments from the four surviving drivers who competed - Stirling Moss, Tony Brooks, Roy Salvadori and Jack Brabham. This is a brilliant account of one of the great sporting events of the last century, at a time when for a grand prix driver 'the chances of survival were statistically no better than those of a Battle of Britain fighter pilot'.
Format: Hardcover
Pages: 152
Edition: First Edition
Publisher: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, London
Published: 11 Mar 2004
ISBN 10: 0297645587
ISBN 13: 9780297645580
Book Overview: Richard Williams is a bestselling author and Chief Sportswriter at the Guardian Includes unique photographs of the Pescara Grand Prix - families picnicing by the side of the road; a course with telegraph poles on the fastest apexes Map of the Pescara course as endpapers A great testament to the time when motor racing was still exciting and dangerous