Power ... and beauty.Produce a book called Legendary Car Engines (MBI MBI Management Buy-In MBI Moody Bible Institute MBI Mathematical Biosciences Institute MBI Modular Building Institute MBI Mechanical Breakdown Insurance MBI Molecular Biology Institute MBI Maslach Burnout Inventory (psychometrics) Publishing Co., $34.95), and you're sure to start an argument for the simple reason that someone's ox will be gored. The introduction leaves no doubt that UK-born author John Simister realized this possibility when he expanded upon a series of articles written for Britain's Classic Cars magazine to produce this book as he claims, "Some of the hardest decisions were about which engines to leave out." A pity, though the 20 engines drawn from the era before emission regulations and--from this--electronics took over as the focal point focal point n. See focus. of engine design are interesting in their own right. Each chapter begins with a beautifully lit photograph on a black background on the left (kudos to photographer Tim Andrew whose pictures are as alluring as any fashion photography), and the chapter title, engine name, and a short but intriguing blurb blurb n. A brief publicity notice, as on a book jacket. [Coined by Gelett Burgess (1866-1951), American humorist.] blurb v. about the design below that. More exquisite photographs of the engines--often in various states of undress--follow, as do bullet points for each design. The latter aren't always complimentary, as seen by Simister's admonition Any formal verbal statement made during a trial by a judge to advise and caution the jury on their duty as jurors, on the admissibility or nonadmissibility of evidence, or on the purpose for which any evidence admitted may be considered by them. that the vaunted vaunt v. vaunt·ed, vaunt·ing, vaunts v.tr. To speak boastfully of; brag about. v.intr. To speak boastfully; brag. See Synonyms at boast1. n. 1. Bugatti Type 35's inline eight cylinder had "terrible combustion chamber Combustion chamber The space at the head end of an internal combustion engine cylinder where most of the combustion takes place. See Combustion design," or that a broken fan belt on a VW Beetle's flat four "brings on near-instant seizure." Nevertheless, the prose is even-handed in the main, though some minor hero worship does come through. As a bonus, subtle color-washed drawings by Bob Freeman are used in four stories, borrowed from the original Classic Cars series. The book is rife with nuggets Nuggets can refer to several branches of interest:
n. pl. mi·nu·ti·ae A small or trivial detail: "the minutiae of experimental and mathematical procedure" Frederick Turner. , or gloss over important details. It's a balancing act every bit as delicate as that performed by the designers of the engines chosen for the author's admiration. As you might expect, eight of the engines (nine if you include the Buick-designed Rover V8) are British in one form or another, though it's hard to fault these choices any more than it is to take issue with the three German, three American (four if you claim the Rover as one of ours), four Italian, and one French (Bugatti was based in Molsheim, France) engines Simister presents for study. All are worthy. All are unique in one way or another. All are deserving of the photographic and textual treatment they receive. If you have any interest in the subject, Legendary Car Engines is well worth the price.--CAS [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] |
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