“Michael Schumacher: The Whole Story”?é?Ø reviewed

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You have to feel sorry for Michael Schumacher’s fans. First their hero quits, and then the predictable rush to cash in on his success follows.

First among which is this all-new, 440-page biography of the record-smashing German, enticingly titled, “The Whole Story”. Or, to paraphrase, “He’s quit now so we rushed this together in time for the Xmas market.”

Perhaps I’m being a being a tad cynical…

It’s tough to spin out a decent-length review when you’ve thought of one word that sums up a book and can’t think how to expand on it.

Hagiography.

“The Whole Story” is also the title of a similarly unedifying Ayrton Senna biography by Christopher Hilton. And, much like that other book, we get a very uncritical and shallow re-telling of Schumacher’s life, with a few remarks on Ferrari’s 21-year wait for a champion threaded in.

It is stiffly chronological and rattles through the pre-F1 years of Schumacher’s life faster than a Bridgestone-shod F2004.

Your average F1 fan might watch most of the races on TV – maybe he’ll even make it to one of the races. The sport doesn’t get great national media coverage and the endless PR demands of drivers makes them deeply reticent in the glare of the media. That has been true of Schumacher above all drivers.

If you want to learn more about your favourite racer a biography might seem the ideal place to turn. But when all it does is numbly re-tell race after race, churning out the same old PR quotes you remember reading when the race happened, it adds nothing.

The dozen chapters of “The Whole Story”?é?Ø passed me by in a semi-daze. Schumacher has been poorly served by biographers. I found Sabine Kehm’s “Schumacher”?é?Ø boring but this is so predictable and by-the-numbers it’s unreadable. (I see Kehm has a new ‘official’ biography of Schumacher out but at present it’s only in German.)

Perhaps the problem is that, just two months after his retirement, it’s still too soon. A decent biography needs a stack of first-hand interviews and, arguably, time to put a person and their achievements into historical context with what came next.

If you’re after a book on Schumacher for Xmas, don’t buy this. Timothy Collins’ “Team Schumacher” is a good read – I recommend that instead.

Published by Haynes

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Keith Collantine
Lifelong motor sport fan Keith set up RaceFans in 2005 - when it was originally called F1 Fanatic. Having previously worked as a motoring...

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2 comments on ““Michael Schumacher: The Whole Story”?é?Ø reviewed”

  1. I wish I had read your review before I bought the book. :-) Agree completely, it is one of the most boring biographies I have ever read, he has just put together his three other books on Michael Schumacher (which are equally boring…well, perhaps not this bad)and created this cure for insomnia.

  2. Honestly, I thoroughly enjoyed reading “Michael Schumacher: The Whole Story”. It was translated into my language and released this year, so finally I was able to read it. And for me it was a great read! I recommend!

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