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1961 Reviews

BOOK OF THE MONTH – Classic & Sports Car

Stirling Moss Scrapbook 1961

Few top-level drivers have the time, or can be bothered, to keep mementoes when at the height of their career, but Stirling Moss even hired someone to collate cuttings, photographs, and other memorabilia. The result was a fantastic record of the privileged life of a celebrity sports hero during the 1950s and 60s. Last year jaguar historian Philip Porter tapped into this rich source for his first scrapbook-style volume focusing on 1955, and its success has resulted in a second edition covering ‘61.

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The chances of a full set are probably optimistic, but the format is again totally absorbing. Because Moss was hugely active in both single-seaters and sports cars, there’s plenty of variety mixed in with his hectic social life and myriad girlfriends. Rob Walker team cars feature prominently in this year with historic wins at Monaco and Goodwood for the blue-and-white racers. Moss comments about the Ferguson four-wheel drive after an epic win in the wet at Oulton Park against Clark, Hill and Mclaren in rear-engined machines are fascinating and illuminating: ‘I was going around the outside and saying, “Thank you.” Absolutely ridiculous. Whereas in an ordinary car you’d be fearing things, this was terrific.’ If you’re a Stirling Moss fan, this is a must-have book and it would be great if Porter persuades Moss to select a year from early in his career for the next volume, though a Jaguar years special is most likely. Also on the cards is a similar-style book on the complete career of Graham Hill. MW

BOOK OF THE MONTH – Octane

Stirling Moss 1961 Scrapbook

If you’re experiencing a sense of déjà vu, it’s because this is the second volume based on Stirling Moss’s own scrapbooks to appear in recent months. And, like the first one, it’s our Book of the Month.

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There aren’t many motor racing books that you can leave on your coffee table and be confident that any visitor – including your car-hating Aunt Agatha – will pick up and enjoy. Designer Andrew Garman and co-author Philip Porter have done a great job of creating a real pick’n’mix of press cuttings, photographs, letters and ephemera alongside a running commentary based on Moss’s diaries; it’s perfect for dipping into as well as being a valuable chronicle of this significant year in Moss’s career.

And then, of course, there were the girls. Moss was clearly not a shrinking violet in 1961. Our favourite of the many letters in the album reads: ‘It is my earnest wish and insistence that you have no further communication with my daughter… She is still a MINOR, being 19 years of age. Further communication on either side is unnecessary.’

Sex, money and motor racing-its all here and there’s more of it to come as Porter publishes further scrapbooks. We can’t wait.

Vintage Racecar

Stirling Moss Scrapbook 1961

This book is the second in a series of scrapbooks that takes a revealing look at one year in the life of Stirling Moss. As described here previously with the first edition, covering the year 1955, the 1961 scrapbook pulls more photos, press clippings and thoughts from Moss’s personal diaries and scrapbooks to take the reader inside his life, month-by-month and event-by-event. Each chapter covers a wide variety of material including races, testing, travel, social engagements and Moss’s thoughts or a plethora of racing and popular personalities.

While this book is beautiful to look at with its large format and gloss all-colour reproduction, one of the most amazing things about it is the true honest and candour with which Moss describes himself and others. In this day and age of politically correct professional drivers and even historic legend wishing to leave behind the most squeaky-clean image possible, it is incredibly refreshing (and fascinating!) to read a significant driver’s unfiltered thoughts on the people and events that make up racing history as we know it. Whether discussing the temperamental nature of mechanic Alf Francia or his romance with star-crossed actress Judy Carne, Moss appears to hold nothing back giving the reader one of the closest insights into the life of a 50s – 60s Formula One driver perhaps ever recorded in print. This book and its predecessor are true treats.

* * * * Reviewed by Casey Annis, Vintage Racecar


Motor Sport - August 06

The second of Porter’s Moss scrapbooks, this follows Moss’s 1961 month by month, expanding on his diary entries and setting the context with newspaper reports, photos, adverts, and asides on girls, shops, nightclubs and circuits. A respite from the purely racing histories, it gives a picture of just how big a news story Moss was – forever in the papers, being photographed at parties and featuring in gossip columns with yet another pretty girl. Little drop-Image - review3.jpgin interview-ettes allow Moss to explain some of the stories, and while some of the clippings can be hard to read, the scrapbook format makes every spread look enticing. Porter’s commentary ties it together, but it’s the interplay between Moss’s diary and the news stories that fascinates.

Review by Gordon Cruickshank

Now Available!
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Very large format (12' x 14' / 300 x 350mm) hardbook book, 160 pages, beautifully produced and packed with original photographs, cuttings and pages from Sir Stirling's diaries. £34.95..

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De Luxe Limited Edition - leather-bound book with leather-bound slipcase, signed by Sir Stirling, numbered and limited to 1,000 worldwide. £75.

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