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Racing for the Reich

Piotr R. Frankowski

How the Nazis Weaponized Motorsport

Barcode 9781836440772
Hardback

Original price £26.55 - Original price £26.55
Original price
£26.55
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Current price £26.55

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Release Date: 22/06/2027

Genre: Sports & Hobbies
Sub-Genre: Sport & Outdoor Recreation
Label: Veloce
Language: English
Publisher: David & Charles

How the Nazis Weaponized Motorsport
A vivid, fast-paced account of German motorsport under the Nazi regime, showing how Mercedes-Benz and Auto Union dominated Grand Prix racing while speed became a tool of propaganda. Blending politics, engineering, and firsthand insight, the book reveals an era where brilliance and ideology collided.
Thunder, speed, and spectacle defined German motorsport in the 1930s – and behind the roar of the engines lay one of the most unsettling intersections of technology, ambition, and ideology in modern history.This book offers a vivid, fast-paced journey through the rise of German motorsport under the Nazi regime. Written in an accessible, contemporary style, it tells the dramatic story of how Mercedes-Benz and Auto Union created the most formidable Grand Prix machines the world had ever seen, and how racing became a tool of national prestige, propaganda, and personal power. Central to the narrative are the National Socialist Motor Corps (NSKK), its influential leader Adolf Hühnlein, and the engineers, drivers, and officials who shaped an era where speed carried political meaning.The story extends far beyond the Grand Prix circuits. Readers are taken into the lesser-known corners of pre-war racing history: the birth of the BMW 328, the ambitious but unrealized Berlin–Rome race, BMW’s involvement in the 1940 Mille Miglia, Ferdinand Porsche’s often overlooked projects, and the crucial role of German hill climbs as proving grounds for both drivers and machines.Equally compelling is the regime’s obsession with records. The book explores high-speed runs on the Autobahn, the extraordinary T80 land-speed car, and the creation of the Autobahn network itself – revealing surprising links between automotive racing and aviation technology, including the Me 209 record-setting aircraft and the shared engineering ideas that blurred the line between road and sky.Adding a rare, personal dimension, the author brings these legendary machines to life through firsthand driving impressions and clear technical insights, allowing readers to experience how these cars actually felt, performed, and behaved at speed.More than a history of racing, this is a gripping portrait of an age when motorsport, technology, and ideology collided – an era where the pursuit of speed reflected both extraordinary human ingenuity and the darker ambitions that fuelled it.