Let’s begin with an obvious point: “Never look back” is a peculiar, even contradictory title for an autobiography.
Derek Warwick, the former Renault, Brabham and Lotus Formula 1 racer – and world sportscar champion – describes it as the motto which saw him through a career in which as many as a dozen of his fellow racers died.
“All the way through my career, there were some disappointments,” he told the BBC recently. “Picking the wrong car at the wrong time. Drivers that were killed, etc… etc… And I always focus on the future.
“I never look back and wish that I was driving a different car or wish that I was Ayrton Senna. Ayrton Senna has been dead for 33, 34 years, so there’s no point looking back. You always look forward and I think it’s been a strong point of my character that’s taken me through some pretty difficult times.”
Warwick and co-author David Tremayne have produced a detailed and illuminating account, one which should satisfy his many supporters who closely followed a career which came tantalisingly close to F1 success at times. In the early eighties many thought Warwick, not Nigel Mansell, the likelier bet as Britain’s next world champion. In the end both took world titles in 1992: Mansell in F1, Warwick in prototype sportscars.
But arguably Warwick deserved more, and looked on course to get it when he joined race-winners Renault at the end of 1983 and came close to winning on his debut for them the follow year. Renault was heading into sharp decline, however – Warwick is especially scathing of Gerard Toth’s calamitous mismanagement – and for 1986 Warwick lined up a move to Lotus, only for Senna to notoriously veto it.
He remains phlegmatic about these career setbacks, no doubt in part because he has confronted the dangers which were more apparent in the eighties and nineties than today. Warwick’s car was the first upon the grim scene where Gilles Villeneuve met his end at Zolder’s Terlamenbocht during qualifying for the 1982 Belgian Grand Prix. Then, in 1991, came the appalling crash which claimed his younger brother Paul.
Advert | Become a RaceFans supporter and
Warwick gives a frank account of this dark period in his life, made all the more trying by the expectations of family members who were eager for him to give up racing, further compounded by the difficulties the family business was by now experiencing. His determination to plough on was vindication by his sportscar success the following year, giving him a second world championship to go with his stock car success of almost 20 years earlier.
It’s not hard to see why ‘Never Look Back’ is among the 15 titles recently nominated for an award by the Royal Automobile Club (along with Benetton: Rebels of Formula 1, reviewed here previously). It avoids the pitfalls of many other biographies by giving the tough times as much weight as the glory days. The text is awkwardly disrupted in a few places by digressive quotes, and the asking price is on the steep side, but otherwise this is the latest in a serious of thoroughly enjoyable and easy to recommend offerings from Evro.
RaceFans rating
Read all the RaceFans book reviews.
Derek Warwick: Never Look Back – The racing life of Britain’s double world champion
Author: Derek Warwick with David Tremayne
Publisher: Evro
Published: 2024
Pages: 432
Price: £60
ISBN: 9781910505908
Reviews
Source link
[redirect url=’https://fastpowers.com/’ sec=’3′]