James Hunt is one of the most remarkable figures in Formula 1 history. He was a world champion, a star and one of the most controversial figures in the F1 paddock. Hunt was a man with a story, a womanizer and someone with some nuts in his head. He was always nicknamed SHUNT, for the huge amount of shunts he had. This big carries the name and the tag and it is well written to provide you with a remarkable read and something to enjoy away from the boring historical facts. The boring historical facts are there too so don’t get too carried away, but is a guaranteed enjoyment package.
The fast life and even faster times of British F1 driver James Hunt are well established, documented in Hunt’s own biography (Against All Odds, co-written with Eoin Young, 1977); in Gerald Donaldson’s James Hunt: The Biography(2003); and in Christopher Hilton’s Memories of James Hunt (2006). Hunt’s F1 career was launched by Lord Alexander Hesketh, an eccentric aristocrat who eschewed sponsors but not yachts, helicopters, pâté, naked girls, and everything alcoholic. The good Lord’s support served as Hunt’s steppingstone to the McLaren F1 team where, in 1976, he won his lone world championship.
The book simply got everything… and its only worth around 30$.