In 1964, in Australia's remote outback, on the dazzling saltpan of Lake
Eyre, Donald Campbell set out to drive his Bluebird car at over 400
miles an hour - faster than any man in history. Things went wrong from
the start: unseasonal rains, a sodden lake bed in which every high-speed
run slewed dangerously, money running short...even an Aboriginal curse.
WIth death shimmering on the horizon before him, the lonely Campbell
tried to hold his nerve until he broke the record. Campbell would lose
his life eventually on Coniston Water, with over thirty years passing
before his body was recovered in 2001, but this strangest - and
greatest - of all his world record attempts was witnessed by a young
reporter. John Pearson's classic book about Donald Campbell is an
extraordinarily compelling and moving portrait of a modern tragic hero,
fighting a battle with inhospitable elements and the outer limits of
technology - and, above all, with himself.