Lost Road Courses: Riverside, Ontario, Bridgehampton & More

by Martin Rudow

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Description

Road racing has long-storied roots in North America that reach from coast to coast and to Canada. Some of the greatest drivers to ever compete raced wickedly fast machines, staged epic duels on winding strips of asphalt, and created history. This history left an enduring legacy that is revealed and celebrated in Lost Road Courses. Road racer and road racing expert Martin Rudow retraces road racing's glorious past and visits the defunct classic road courses across the United States and show more Canada. Many road courses were built in the 1950s and 1960s, the golden age of American road racing. These classic road courses built and hosted famous races for Trans-Am, Can-Am, IndyCar, Formula 1, and sports car racing, but did not survive the times. They fell victim to changing times, poor business decisions, urban sprawl, safety standards, and increasing real estate prices. Rudow recounts the breathtaking races and fascinating history of more than 16 tracks from around North America. Riverside International Raceway, Bridgehampton Race Circuit, Ontario Motor Speedway, Continental Divide Raceway, and many others were once major race venues that have since closed. The great race teams, legendary drivers, classic race series that visited the tracks, and cars that turned laps are brought into full focus. The exploits of Chaparral, McLaren, Bud Moore, Lotus, Penske, and other race teams as well as racing greats Mario Andretti, Parnelli Jones, Jim Hall, A. J. Foyt, Al Unser, Jim Clark, and Dan Gurney are covered. Rudow also digs beneath the surface to reveal the story behind the story. The visionaries and businessmen who saw potential and risked capital to build these palaces of speed come back to life. He also recognizes the unsung heroes and regional racers who competed, staffed, and took on various roles at these tracks. In the pages of this book, a nostalgic tour of these famous races at these vintage road circuits unfolds. Many period photos illustrate the racing action and the tracks themselves in their former glory, and modern color shows the tracks as they currently stand. If you're a fan of classic sports car, Can-Am, Trans-Am, IndyCar, Formula 1, as well as classic and unique tracks of yesteryear, this book is a must-have. show less

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17 reviews
I was a teenager and into my early 20's when these tracks were up and running. I read about the races held in these places in news papers and in magazines, even visited Meadowdale with racer once, who was racing there. But, in many cases I was unaware of what happened to them; why no more races? Now I know and in a way that brings back the romance of that era. Takes the sting(in a way) out of their demise and knowing their current status is somehow comforting. Being able to see the old and new of the track site is also very satisfying, if a bit sad when thinking of "the good old days" and, maybe, of what might have been. For race fans who also want to relive the excitement of the racing tradition of the 50's and 60's, this is a must have.
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
This is a fine book. It works on two levels. First, as a stand alone history of seventeen now closed race courses; second, as a reference to be utilized with other racing history resources. As a history the author has provided compelling narrative, archival photographs, maps and diagrams, and first person accounts recalling the history of each venue. As a reference the book provides aid to the student of American racing with its diagrams and maps of each course allowing a perspective of the challenges sometimes lacking in racing histories which omit the physical layout of the track.
The book is also a trip back in time. It is nostalgia for those race fans who attended events held at these seventeen tracks; a look back at the cars and show more personalities which were the heart and soul of an earlier era. show less
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
i love looking at pictures of places that were once popular destinations but have now gone unused for a long period of time. yes they are sad (especially if they were dear to you) but I find them fascinating. I also happen to LOVE nascar road course racing. so this book seemed like it would be right up my alley. im happy to say that it did not disappoint! lots of great photos, the writing was fantastic and very very detailed (I cant imagine the hours the author put in!) and what really put it over the top was showing diagrams of the original course lay outs. to me, that stuff was just so cool to see! this is the 3rd book ive read by car tech and I just can emphasize enough how good these folks are at what they do!!!!!! car tech, you've show more done it again........another home run! show less
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
Disclaimer: I received a free copy of this book from the publisher in return for an honest review.

Lost Road Courses is a treasure-trove of facts about road courses that are no longer active (and that, in many cases, have disappeared with little trace). This book works on many levels.

At first glance, each chapter quickly presents basic facts about the particular road course being discussed in the chapter: the name and location of the course, the years it was in operation, a brief description of the track length and type, the racing series which appeared there, and the current status. There is also a basic diagram of the track. So the casual browser of the book can quickly glean a lot of basic information with little effort.

For the show more detail-hungry reader, the book is a gold mine. In each track's chapter, Rudow describes the circumstances of the founding of the track, and offers a season-by-season discussion of the major events, drivers, and circumstances regarding the challenges involved in keeping the track running. He also describes the circumstances leading to each track's demise, and describes what has happened to each site.

Oh, and there are photos! There are many, many photos. We see photos of the tracks in action, the cars which raced on them, and the drivers who battled. Furthermore, Rudow visited each track site and provides photos of what is (or is not) left of the tracks in the present day.

Rudow has obviously done his homework, and researched this book well. It's well-organized, and for the most part well-written.

It's probably quibbling, but I'm taking a half-star off my rating for some annoying sentence fragments. (Examples: "Not what sports car drivers were used to." (Page 12) "Which it was, after all." (page 168); I have a thing about the use of sentence fragments in formal non-fiction writing. (Used judiciously, they can be an effective device in novels.), These were especially grating because they tended to be at the end of paragraphs. It's a minor point.

The book still gets 4 1/2 stars from me. If I could give it 4 3/4, I would.
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½
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
Gosh, this is great book. The race courses are just an excuse for some great car pictures and some funny and interesting vignettes. Great combination of images and text, well layed-out and just a lot of fun.
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
This book does exactly what it claims to do and does it very well. Seventeen former courses are covered. Each course is given a chapter, starting with a course map and summary information, including lengths and turns, affiliations, and current status. The text itself gives a detailed, in some cases year-by-year, walkthrough of the history of each track from a background of its inception and construction, through changes in the track and major events, and finally the circumstances under which it was shuttered. Each chapter is nicely illustrated with some great historical photographs, showing the construction of tracks, the cars that drove on them, as well as photographs and aerial images of the tracks' current state, many taken by the show more author himself. I'm not knowledgeable enough of the subject matter to comment on the accuracy of the histories, but I didn't notice any errors. Overall, a fascinating read. show less
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
I received the book in the mail 2 days ago. After thumbing through it I could not put it down. The pictures are fantastic however the real interest of the book are the histories of the various courses. I particularly enjoyed the stories of the oldest tracks like the Roosevelt Raceway and the Bahamas Speed Weeks, Oaks Course. I had never heard of these race tracks and their stories were intriguing. I would recommend this book to anybody interested in auto racing and anybody interested in the bygone era of NASCAR, Formula racing, etc.
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.

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Classifications

Genres
Nonfiction, Sports and Leisure, General Nonfiction, History
DDC/MDS
796.720973Arts & recreationRecreation, sports, and performing artsSportsCar RacingMotor racingSubclassificationsHistory, geographic treatment, biographyNorth AmericaUnited States
LCC
GV1033 .R83Geography, Anthropology and RecreationRecreation. LeisureRecreation. LeisureSportsAutomobile travel. Motoring. Automobile racing
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Members
23
Popularity
1,145,357
Reviews
17
Rating
(4.91)
Languages
English
Media
Paper
ISBNs
1