Driving with the Devil: Southern Moonshine, Detroit Wheels, and the Birth of NASCAR
Neal Thompson, . . Crown, $25 (411pp) ISBN 978-1-4000-8225-4
Thompson's raucous account of NASCAR's early decades raises from obscurity the "motherless, dirt-poor southern teens... in jacked-up Fords full of corn whiskey" who originated the sport that's now the second most popular in America. Stock car racing grew up in the 1930s South, when moonshine runners, having perfected the art of daredevil driving while escaping "revenuers" hunting for untaxed whiskey, transferred their skills to the event booming in Atlanta and Daytona Beach. Loosely defined as races where the cars were totally unmodified—even though they were actually supercharged beyond recognition—stock car racing was a rawer, more redneck endeavor than AAA-sanctioned events like the Indy 500, which were the realm of rich enthusiasts driving specially built vehicles. Thompson (
Reviewed on: 07/24/2006
Genre: Nonfiction
Open Ebook - 305 pages - 978-0-307-52226-9
Paperback - 448 pages - 978-1-4000-8226-1