Some books are better than others, and there are the staple reads I’m sure anyone with a passing interest in motorsport will have read already: AJ Baime’s Go Like Hell, for instance, chronicling the war between Ford and Ferrari that was played out on the likes of Daytona and Le Mans in the 60s, or Michael Cannell’s The Limit which so vividly paints a human portrait of motorsport’s most brutal era. There are recent masterpieces like Adrian Newey’s How to Build a Car (something that does the unthinkable and makes Red Bull Racing, self-appointed villains of F1’s new Drive to Survive reality TV era, actually quite likeable), underlining Newey’s place in a lineage alongside the likes of Colin Chapman and Enzo Ferrari as one of the sport’s all-time greats. Or if you want to read about some of those older legends there’s fare like Brock Yates’ Enzo Ferrari: The Man and Machine, if you want to find out more about Il Commendatore before it gets the Hollywood treatment via Michael Mann next year.