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The Fast Times of Albert Champion

From Record-Setting Racer to Dashing Tycoon, An Untold Story of Speed, Success, and Betrayal

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
RACER. INNOVATOR. CELEBRITY. MOGUL. CHAMPION. This is the first biography of the short but exciting life of Albert Champion-record-setting bicyclist and motorcyclist, daredevil racecar driver, early automobile innovator, charismatic ladies' man, and celebrity of the Jazz Age. Though most Americans have heard of the companies Albert Champion founded-ACDelco and Champion Spark Plug-few know much about the charismatic man behind them.Like a Richard Branson of the early 20th century, or an Evel Knievel with a business degree, Champion was a powerhouse whose life was defined by both speed and success. Champion rose from poverty in Paris to great wealth and fame in both his native France and the United States. As a bicycle racer, Champion set more than a hundred world records. When the urban speed limit was 8 mph, he was the first ever to drive a motorcycle a mile under a minute. A car-racing crash snapped a leg bone that kept him in traction for eleven weeks. Undeterred, he hobbled out of the hospital on crutches and recovered to win the French national cycling championship. Champion invested his prize money to become a tycoon in the new and revolutionary American auto industry, working closely with the leading players and amassing thirty US. His contemporaries included Charles Lindbergh, who endorsed Champion's product by saying, "AC Spark Plugs kept my engine running perfectly."; Louis Chevrolet, whom Champion backed financially until it came out that he was trying to seduce Chevrolet's wife, which led to a fight and the end of their friendship; and William Durant, founder of a "new holding company" called General Motors. A notorious ladies' man, Champion's many dalliances were fodder for the papers and finally ended in a love triangle that resulted in his death under mysterious circumstances.
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    • Kirkus

      October 1, 2014
      An admiring biography of race car driver and daredevil Albert Champion (1878-1927).Champion was unquestionably an innovator in cycling and automotive history. He created and pioneered the internal combustion engine, spark plugs (he's the AC in AC Delco), and inflatable tires for cars and motorcycles, in turn changing and expanding the industry. His childhood curiosity and aptitude for riding a unicycle through the streets of his hometown of Paris stoked his imagination, and The Automobile, a trade publication, wrote that he was "perpetually afire with new ideas and ever reaching for further achievements...versatile, amusing, brilliant, and delightfully companionable." Champion not only broke records at speed and endurance races throughout France and Germany, including the inaugural Tour de France in 1903, he also earned the title of "the fastest driver in America around a circular track, on two wheels or four" at the turn of the 20th century. Nye (co-author: Peak Performance Under Pressure: How to Achieve Extraordinary Results Under Difficult Circumstances, 2012, etc.) devotes more than half the book to Champion's endurance and speed-racing careers, as well as the history of the sport until the early 1900s. The author also explores bike design but does not provide enough information about Champion's nature or behavior outside the garage or the boardroom. The book is painstakingly detailed and researched, and the infodump eventually has an enervating effect on readers-e.g., Nye tediously lays out Paris' topography and construction of the city, even the individual boulevards ("The neighborhood of Batignolles is shaped like a croissant sitting on the Right Bank of the Seine..."). Champion's numerous achievements are indeed impressive, but in this one-sided account, he's not very intriguing, despite the author's veneration. An idolizing, overlong biography for avid bike-racing fans and speed freaks only.

      COPYRIGHT(2014) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      October 1, 2014

      This story you can't believe you've never heard before involves Albert Champion (1878-1927), founder of automotive company Champion Spark Plug, which, after a merger and an acquisition, ultimately became part of General Motors. Champion started riding on one wheel, as a unicyclist, and simply kept adding them. He became a record-setting bicyclist and motorcyclist in his native France, then a daredevil race-car driver, and eventually a pioneering tycoon in the American automotive industry. With humble beginnings as a Parisian street performer, Champion was a naturally adept showman. His bravado and flair led him to great success, as well as his inevitable downfall under tragic circumstances. Nye (Peak Performance Under Pressure) tells this hyperbolic tale of a French errand boy who became an American millionaire with a cinematic beat, and marks every step with such an undertone of determinism that Champion's story--both the highs and lows--feels unavoidably fatalistic. However, Champion's tale is worth being told, not least for his conviction to transform the idea of a self-propelled road vehicle from a mere vision to a behemoth industry. VERDICT Illustrated, indexed [see header], and a diamond-in-the-rough compelling read for all sports enthusiasts.--Benjamin Malczewski, Toledo-Lucas Cty. P.L.

      Copyright 2014 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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