A witty and insightful account of the life and times of the automobile, by one of the world's great design writers.
- Author Stephen Bayley considers the car as the greatest cultural and design phenomenon of the 20th century
- Includes 60 of his popular monthly articles for Octane the leading classic car magazine
- Featured in the Financial Times
The automobile is the ultimate analog machine and mankind's most ingenious, seductive and damaging invention. For over a century, cars have provided reference points for our notions of style, status and desire. In design terms, the Age of Combustion was as rich and varied as architecture's Baroque - and far more popular. And now it is coming to an end, as the internal-combustion engine is superseded by the battery and cars become wheeled computers, running on AI not oil. Together with a wide-ranging introduction, this book reproduces 60 of Stephen Bayley's popular monthly columns for Octane, the outstanding classic car magazine where, for more than 10 years, he has provided the most consistent and insightful commentary on car culture, often based on privileged access to industry insiders.