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Maneuvering a 3,600-pound machine at 200 miles per hour alongside dozens of other race cars is intense. So is life. And the experiences of NASCAR drivers, crews, owners, and executives on and off the track are ones all of us can benefit from in our everyday lives. In 36 chapters about many of your favorite NASCAR personalities, Sundays at the Track shares true stories and testimonials that offer hard-won lessons on · forgiveness · grace · perseverance · patience · endurance · sacrifice · winning graciously · losing honorably · self-control · faithfulness · integrity · suffering · purpose · and more Perfect for the stock car racing enthusiast in your life, Sundays at the Track celebrates the drive to overcome trials, experience God's best for us, and reach our own victory lane.
As the saying goes, "Life is like a vapor, here today and gone tomorrow." It can be an amazing journey of ups and downs and can also be very challenging at times. Oftentimes, over the years, folks have told me that I should consider writing a book about my life. I pushed the thought aside for a long time, and finally, after turning eighty years old and with much prompting and encouragement, I decided maybe it was time to try my hand at writing my biography. This book is about my life, being born to an ordinary couple in a farming community in Northwest Ohio in 1944, and the changes that began to happen as I became an adult. I have experienced just about everything life has to offer, includin...
I had too many secrets. I wanted out of this closet. People all over the world were coming out. We could see them on national TV and books had been written. What was so difficult about it? I had to be free to talk with my grandchildren about it. I didn't want them to ever experience anything like this. There were more doors to open and bricks that needed to be blasted. What if my grandchildren changed their opinions of me when the truth was told? I couldn't hide anymore, my hands needed to be free. I had lived a half of a century and the one person who knew the truth had already forgiven me. Now, it was my time to do the same.
This is an expose of the role of two leading locomotive engineers - Collett and Hawksworth - who were responsible for GWR engine building policy following Churchward's legacy, revealing a series of mistakes and missed opportunities in the years leading up to nationalisation.
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William Stanier revolutionised steam locomotive design on the LMS creating not just machines fit for purpose but drawing on the experience of others to produce without doubt the most successful non-standard steam engine ever to run in the United Kingdom: 'Turbomotive'.
This title examines the role that William Dean played in the success of the Great Western Railway, arguing that his successor has taken the credit for much of Dean's legacy.