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Hardcover Bugatti Queen: In Search of a French Racing Legend Book

ISBN: 1400061687

ISBN13: 9781400061686

Bugatti Queen: In Search of a French Racing Legend

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

"Even if you have never thrilled to the drone of powerful cars jockeying for position on a racetrack," writes London's Literary Review, "Miranda Seymour's biography of the daring female driver Hell?... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

A wonderful true story

This is a remarkable book, not only for its unusual subject - a female racing driver - but also for its fascinating description of pre-war motor racing. It was another world, full of glamour, courage and upsets, a very long way from the minutely organized and rather sterile F1 scene of today, more closely resembling gladatorial combat than modern racing. I say that primarily because of the death toll, which was epic. Basically, if you were a racing driver you had bit less than a 50/50 chance of survival over say five years, and it is pretty obvious that a large part of the popularity of the sport was down to the expectation of tragedy. And tragedy it was: you could count yourself lucky if you died instantly. Many more were mangled or died horrifically, trapped in burning cars. So in such a world, which I guess could reasonably described as macho, all the more remarkable that a woman could rise to be one of the top drivers, loved and respected by crowds and other drivers alike. The "Bugatti Queen" certainly had her fair share of bad accidents, but somehow she escaped death and so lived to a ripe old age. And yet, perhaps the strangest part of this tale is how, having been a huge celebrity in her heyday, she disappeared from view and sank into borderline poverty and obscurity for many years. She died literally unnoticed. And if hadn't been for this excellent book, she'd have been totally forgotten. Makes you think.

An Exciting Lady

I read this book in one day. What a life. If only the racing personalities of today could be so colorful. Instead we get a bunch of men spout the same old corporate jargon. Helle Nice could not only raced cars she lived life to the fullest.

A Fascinating and Highly Entertaining Biography

Born at the turn of the 20th century, Helle Nice, nee Helene Delangle, was a woman who lost friends and gained enemies, a woman you either loved or despised. There was not much middle ground with her. Between her less-than-impressive beginnings and her lackluster end, Helle Nice had one wild ride of a lifetime. Her thirst for daredevilry led her into a host of risky pursuits: mountain climbing in the Alps, skiing, horseback riding --- and car racing. Whatever involved speed gave her joy. Racy in more ways than one, Helle surrounded herself with men --- many of them great men. She dallied with the likes of a married count, a famous wine baron, well-known actors and popular drivers. Maybe they were a means to an end, or perhaps they simply amused her. Whatever the case, she could rarely be seen without one. While women admired her courage, they figured sparsely into her friendships. The audacious racer's beauty and guile did not go unnoticed, along with her easy way with the cameras. She never hesitated to pose shamelessly for the press. But she made many enemies along the way. By their very nature, racers thrive on adulation. And egos recklessly crushed are likely to fight back. By the time Helle's career waned, she had accumulated a large contingent of those who disliked her. Forty years after Helle's death, an aging rival still remembered her unkindly: "I don't believe she ever thought about anything but sex and showing off." Two things she seems to have done plenty of. One finds it hard to believe that seeing her first race at age three could have paved the way for her, but it most certainly did not scare her off. Nor did the loss of many of her racing companions. Nearly every year saw another one dead. The cars did not hold up as well as the machines of today. Spectators perished along with their heroes. No one seemed to care about the safety; the sheer thrill of speed --- watching it or driving it --- was paramount. Helle Nice's appetites ran toward the outlandishly daring. Even when she embarked on a campaign to become a great dancer, she hungered for the biggest spotlight, using nudity as her draw. Then, when her dancing career came to an end, she renewed her interest in her greatest love --- racing --- a career that was interrupted by the Second World War. It was an interruption that proved permanent. The reader gets to rub shoulders with auto pioneers like Renault, Ferrari and, as the title suggests, Bugatti, while being transported to some of France's loveliest countryside. Following Helle's career takes us to scores of exotic places, like Monte Carlo, Rio and Casablanca, and to some of the world's most famous racetracks. But after decades of excitement and adventure, Helle Nice fell into obscurity. Having once lived in a fashionable residence in Paris boasting an enviable view, she died broken and penniless. Her last address was the top floor of an attic apartment, looking out onto a seedy part of Nice. Did her alliances during the
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