Excellent book! Hilton does a great job describing in-depth Tazio's greatest races, namely his Mille Miglia wins, his 1935 German GP win against the mighty German teams, and his last hurrah in the 1948 Mille Miglia when, at 57 years old and spitting blood (he had lung disease and only three years to live), he had a substantial lead with the finish in sight, but his Ferrari literally disintegrated out from under him. Enzo Ferrari himself was so concerned about Tazio's welfare, he reportedly had a frocked priest stand in the road and try to stop him before he killed himself. When Tazio dropped out, he was 29 minutes ahead of the second place car. The second place car eventually won -- 70 miles ahead of the runner-up. Tazio was old, but he hadn't lost his fabulous skills. The book has spectacular black and white photos, some never published before. I recommend you buy this book, and supplement it with Cesare de Agostini's Nuvolari - The Legend Lives On. This book also has many great photos not found in the Hilton book. Together, for around $60, you will have an excellent, comprehensive history of the world's greatest race driver. From what I can see, most of the other books on Tazio are very rare and very expensive. The photos dramatically show how big these Alfas and Auto Unions were -- much longer and heavier than any Indy car. I would guesstimate the wheelbase was at least 110", and they must have weighed at least 3,000 pounds. And there they were, wearing t-shirts and cloth helmets, manhandling these fire-breathing monsters on skinny tires over narrow, bad roads, lined with spectators and trees. Tazio truly raced in a golden era. He stood head and shoulders above his competition.