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6 Works 144 Members 8 Reviews

About the Author

Martin Gurdon is a freelance writer

Works by Martin Gurdon

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Unless you are really unfortunate, your car today will almost certainly start first time, be warm, dry and traffic allowing, you will make it to your destination with no dramas. However, motoring in the 1960’s when Martin Gurdon was growing up, was an adventure in itself. Cars could frequently be seen by the side of the road with the bonnets raised and steam coming out; it was not uncommon to take a full toolset and a spare gearbox, just in case… Gurdon’s fascination with all things with wheels was borderline obsession, he could tell the just from the note of the exhaust, what car was passing, by reading every detail in magazines he could glance at a car and tell just how rare it was. This just seemed normal, surely everyone was like this; weren’t they?

Then his happy childhood broke down; his mother’s illness caused a family crisis and he was dispatched to her sister in Lancashire. His new school tolerated him, but his father made the decision to bring him down closer to home and placed him in a vegetarian boarding school. So begins the final five years of his flawed education, an experience that he tolerated because of his continued obsession with cars, and the thrill of acquiring a Triumph Herald for illicit trips out. Stumbling out of school with no idea what he wanted to do, he ends up in a couple of dead end jobs, frequently visiting the job centre before slowly realising that writing might be something he could do, and if he could write about cars, that would be just about perfect.

Gurdon is his capacity as a motoring journalist has had the privilege of driving some of the world fastest cars, but he served his motoring apprenticeship in the appalling cars that were produced in the seventies, Reliant Robins, Morris Marinas, 2CVs; he is lucky to be alive after reading about some of the scrapes that he got into. Nostalgia seeps from this book like oil from a leaking head gasket and whilst Gurdon acknowledges that some of the cars he owned were dreadful, we see others through the rose-tinted windscreen, in particular his fond memories of his father’s Bristol 401, a car he loved so much, he bought one of his own. There are several laugh out loud parts in this book and a few of what my eldest would call ‘facepalm’ moments. Good stuff and an ideal book for your friendly petrol head.
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PDCRead | Apr 6, 2020 |
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
A pocket-sized book, written in a slightly humorous way. After a brief history of the motorcar which might be of interest to anyone, it becomes really rather dull. Do I really need to know what music people listened to in their cars in the 1980s or what kind of bumper stickers they might sport? I was expecting this book to actually give me some information that would be of use in discussing cars, but unfortunately I am no better a bluffer now than I was before. If you're already a car fan then you might like this. Otherwise - probably not.… (more)
 
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onelittlething | 3 other reviews | Nov 11, 2014 |
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
An interesting little book. Bursting with facts and anecdotes. Primarily for readers that have an interest in cars.
 
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Bridgey | 3 other reviews | Mar 18, 2014 |
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
The Bluffer's Guide to Cars is deceptively small but full of information and a healthy dose of humour. This little book covers everything from how a car works, to the history of cars and types of driver. I found it very readable and easy to drop in and out of. I'm not a massive petrolhead, but this was an enjoyable read and plenty of useful information that could easily have been delivered in a boring way. I will definitely look out for other Bluffer's Guides' on other topics.
 
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Amy_blue82 | 3 other reviews | Jan 5, 2014 |

Statistics

Works
6
Members
144
Popularity
#143,281
Rating
½ 3.4
Reviews
8
ISBNs
14

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