Category: book
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F1 winter break survival tip 1 – Adrian Newey’s book
Adrian Newey is an engineer and he writes like an engineer. (If you don’t know who he is, well, he is the most successful car designer in F1 history. His cars won several championships, both drivers and constructors – in the color of Williams, McLaren and Red Bull, the latest one being the 2023 Red…
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Christmas gift guide for F1 fans
Someone has asked me recently if I could give her some good tips for F1 gifts. Well, I could! 😀 So here is my list, these are all tested things that I have either bought or I plan to buy, and I’m sure they would me great Christmas presents to any F1 fans. As a…
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THE F1 history book – Grand Prix by Will Buxton
If you are looking for a Christmas gift for an F1 fan (or for yourself, and you don’t have this book yet), then your search is over, because this is it!! This book should be on the shelf of every F1 fan. It is such a comprehensive guide of everything F1 that it can give…
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Guenther Steiner: Unfiltered
After Surviving to Drive, the next Guenther book can’t come soon enough, especially when he got sacked. Was it everything I hoped for? Well, given that I’d happily listen to the man explain the recipe of toast, I don’t think I had very big expectations other than just him telling his perspective in his usual…
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My dates with Guenther Steiner
The whole reason for my visiting England was that Guenther Steiner started touring the United Kingdom with this thing called “An Evening/Afternoon with Guenther Steiner” – it is his booktour basically. My take on this was that he is hilarious, I don’t even care what he is talking about, even if he just explains how…
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What to read if you are interested in Red Bull Racing?
I am living in my Red Bull era these days, and also this year is their 20th season, so I think it is reasonable that I wanted to learn a bit more about their history. I recommend these two! Red Bulletin – 20 Laps around the Sun: I accidentally saw it in a supermarket in…
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Book review: The Formula
When I started reading this book, I thought it was like Drive to Survive, but in a book form: showing us the heroes of F1 and explaining how looking for loopholes in the regulations advances the technology of the everyday world – and it 100% appealed to my idealist personality. Then somewhere around the part…