First off, I use to be hard core into IndyCar driving back when the series was called CART. When the series broke up to form IRL and CHAMP I kind of drifted back to NASCAR for my fandom. Now I am a devout NASCAR (Tony Stewart) fan yet I am a still a casual fan of IRL. If there is race on and I don’t have anything better to do I will watch it. Of course this holds true any time any type of motorsports- the other day I was watching dirt bikes because it was the only racing I could find, but I digress. So I “know” the IRL drivers in that, I know their names, car number, sponsors…the basics. But I don’t know their stories. This book gave me the chance to dive into Will Power’s story and get to know Will on a deeper level. But I don’t think you have to be a Will Power fan to appreciate his story.
The book starts off with him growing up a child who “played racing” as a child. Of course it didn’t hurt that his father was a grassroots racer in Australia. It follows his career through his eyes and the eyes of those closest to him, including his family and close friends. It spans the course of his racing from a young boy in Toowoomba Australia (and now I know where the name of my favorite dish at the Outback comes from) as an up and coming driver in Australia, to his move to England for F1 and then eventually to America and then to Indy car and everything in between. The book aptly covers both the extreme highs of winning a championship and the lowest of lows throughout different points in Will’s carrer. There are parts of Will’s career that will ring true to any racer, any style of motorsports- especially his early struggles to attain much needed sponsorship money as an early racer in Australia, to what could have been a terrible career ending injury at Sonoma Raceway. And then there is living the horrifying accident at Las Vegas Motor Speedway that took fellow driver Dan Wheldon’s life through Will’s eyes. Let’s just say it was a good thing I wasn’t wearing mascara when I read that chapter.
Now for the book itself: The Sheer Force of Will Power is a lovely hard bound (also available in e-book format) book with 352 pages and includes two sections of color photos spanning Will Power’s career. It also contains a fairly extensive glossary- so don’t let the difference in open wheel and stock car racing vernacular worry you if you are a NASCAR fan as many of my readers are.
I highly recommend this book for Will Power fans, IRL fans, and motorsports fans in general because I think that everyone will get something out of this book.
(part or all of the above review originally appeared on badgroove.com)