[Book Review] Ford GT: How Ford Silenced the critics, Humbled Ferrari and Conquered Le Mans

Ford GT: How Ford Silenced the critics, Humbled Ferrari and Conquered Le Mans

By Preston Lerner and Dave Friedman

The story is a familiar one. After Henry Ford IIโ€™s attempt to buy Ferrari is rebuffed, he vows to defeat the Italians at Le Mans, creates a bold new car that requires a great deal of development before finally winning, then repeats the triumph the following year and is finally spared the pain of withdrawal by a rules change.

This book comes from two stellar journalists with extensive histories of their own, Preston Lerner, whose previous work includes the definitive story of Lance Reventlowโ€™s Scarabs, and Dave Friedman, who was Shelby Americanโ€™s official photographer all through the Cobra and Le Mans eras.

While Friedmanโ€™s imagery sets a high bar for Lerner to match, the author ferrets out the details behind the scenes and then stirs them into a coherent narrative to simplify the task. He takes readers into tense preliminary meetings, rainy test sessions and, of course, actual races, all while putting everything into precise perspective.

Itโ€™s all here: the failures of the first two attempts; the confusion surrounding the mishandled โ€™66 finish when the team finally won; the vindication of โ€™67 when Dan Gurney and A.J. Foyt delivered the cherished all-American triumph driving a car made in the USA; and an Epilogue discussing the โ€™68 and โ€™69 victories by private GT40s while looking ahead to Fordโ€™s official return to Le Mans in 2016.

Available for US$60 from enthusiast bookstores or direct from publisher Motorbooks at www.QuartoKnows.com