Events
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Start: 7:00 pm
End: 8:00 pm
Friday
05/7/10 7:00pm-8:00pm
Dan Pierce reads
from Real NASCAR: White Lightning, Red
Clay, and Big Bill France
In this history of the stock car racing circuit known as
NASCAR, Daniel Pierce offers a revealing new look at the sport from its postwar
beginnings on Daytona Beach and Piedmont dirt tracks through the early 1970s
when the sport spread beyond its southern roots and gained national
recognition. Following NASCAR founder Big Bill France from his start as a
mechanic, Real NASCAR details the sport's genesis as it has never been shown
before. Pierce not only confirms the popular notion of NASCAR's origins in
bootlegging, but also establishes beyond a doubt the close ties between
organized racing and the illegal liquor industry, a story that readers will
find both fascinating and controversial.
Drawing on the memories of a variety of
participants--including highly colorful characters like Lloyd Seay, Roy Hall,
Gober Sosebee, Smokey Yunick, Bunky Knudsen, Humpy Wheeler, Bobby Isaac, Junior
Johnson, and Big Bill France himself--Real NASCAR shows how the reputation for
wildness of these racers-by-day and bootleggers-by-night drew throngs of
spectators to the tracks in the 1930s, '40s, and '50s. They came to watch their
heroes maneuver ordinary automobiles at incredible speed, beating and banging
on each other, wrecking spectacularly, and fighting out their differences in
the infield.
Although France faced many challenges--including a fickle
Detroit that often seemed unsure of its support for the sport, safety issues
that killed star drivers and threatened its very existence, and drivers who
twice tried to unionize to gain a bigger piece of the NASCAR pie--by the early
1970s France and his allies had laid a firm foundation for what has become
today a billion-dollar industry and arguably the largest spectator sport in
America.
Daniel S. Pierce is associate professor and chair of the
History Department at the UNC- Asheville. He is author of The Great Smokies: From Natural Habitat to National Park.
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