The life and times of Enzo Ferrari are subjects about which much has been written and said in more than 50 years of motor racing history. Yet the Ferrari that emerges from this book is, indeed, another: a kind of unpublished Ferrari. Telling the story in a series of interviews conducted by the author are 20 people, whose lives were touched by the great car constructor in one way or another: Maria Teresa De Filippis, Gino Munaron, Luigi Valenzano, Edoardo Lualdi, Mauro Forghieri, Franco Gozzi, Nino Vaccarella, Andrea De Adamich, Jonathan Williams, Arturo Merzario, Niki Lauda, Clay Regazzoni, Fiamma Breschi, Joann Villeneuve, Riccardo Patrese, Jacky Ickx, Ernesto Brambilla, Marcello Sabbatini, Bruno Giacomelli and Giulio Borsari. Each one of them reconstructs his or her own Ferrari, offering the reader a new image - not without its contradictions - in an intense account that almost becomes a novel in its own right. Each interview is also illustrated with rare archive pictures.
After the closure of the local General Motors plant, Pulitzer Prize winner Amy Goldstein spent years among the inhabitants of Janesville and told their stories on a journey to discover humanity's infinite resources.
A collection of adventures spent riding any kind of bike, driving on the roads of the world and challenging the most famous tracks. But also a very faithful photograph of the most beautiful period in the world of motorcycles, the one that goes from the early 1990s to the beginning of the economic crisis that has decimated the market and the environment of motorcycling in Europe.
The book is about the legend of Senna and gives us the definitive image of the most fascinating hero of the Circus. Until the tragic epilogue. One Sunday twenty-five years ago. In Imola. At the curve of the Tamburello. The last curve.