Mr. Le Mans, Tom Kristensen Tells All In His In-Depth & Dynamic Autobiography

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RELEASE DATE
May 18th, 2021
AUTHORs
Tom Kristensen & Dan Philipsen
PUBLISHER
Evro Publishing Limited
pages
432
ISBN
978-8797260302
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Mr. Le Mans

Calling yourself “Mr. Anything” takes a certain amount of arrogance. It’s completely immodest, and very few get to self-apply that title. That’s why this book’s title, Mr. Le Mans: Tom Kristensen, is both right on the money and strangely off. Tom Kristensen is a lot of things. However, he’s not full of himself, loud, obnoxious, or an otherwise complete jerk.

But one thing you can definitely call him is Mr. Le Mans.

In His Own Words

On one level, this book is surprising because it’s truly written by Tom Kristensen, not a ghostwriter. Kristensen wrote it in Danish originally, then had it translated and edited by co-author Dan Philipsen, an editor at TV2 Sport in Denmark.

This fits because Tom Kristensen is a model of modern Danishness. He’s got the broad, handsome features, the thoughtful and well-spoken demeanor, and the quiet, Nordic determination to see something through to the end. Before anyone would mention that he’s from Denmark, you could pick him out as being from the same place as Niels Bohr and Søren Kierkegaard.

The only difference is that Tom Kristensen is good with a car—very, very good. He has won the 24 Hours of Le Mans nine times! The next closest guy, Jacky Ickx, has won it six times. Kristensen won six out of nine races in a row—double the number of follow-on victories than the next group of guys who did three in a row. They call him Mr. Le Mans because he is Mr. Le Mans.

From Mr. Le Mans: Tom Kristensen, published by Evro Publishing Limited.

Not Your Average Story

Mr. Le Mans starts out with a tennis match Kristensen played with his best friend before his racing career started. Chapter one is, more or less, about losing versus winning, what it means to be competitive, what it means to believe you can do something, and having the confidence and humility to accomplish your goals.

Kristensen knows and deftly communicates that humility is one of the key components of being good at something. If you don’t know your limitations, and if all you have is arrogance and self-confidence, then you’re never going to overcome them. And everybody has limits, even nine-time winners at Le Mans.

Sure, Kristensen talks about racing, but he also talks about his relationship with his mom and sailing with his dad. Kristensen also explores what it’s like to be a father himself, his relationship with teammates, loss in general, the nature of friendship, rivalries, and everything else that counts as a well-examined life.

From Mr. Le Mans: Tom Kristensen, published by Evro Publishing Limited.

Sebring 2000

In an odd way, the most emblematic example of this in the book is a seemingly innocuous photograph. On page 138, there’s a mild shot of Tom and his Audi teammate Michele Alboreto at Sebring in 2000. Michele is reclining back into Kristensen; both of them are smiling. Racing fans will know that Alboreto was killed in a testing accident in Germany not long after this.

Many books would have mentioned that in the caption. But in Mr. Le Mans, it simply reads, “Tom and Michele Alboreto at Sebring 2000.” That’s it. 

That photo, like the whole book, seems to say, “Yes, we know what we’re talking about here, but let’s go deeper. Racing is obvious. Death is obvious. What’s not obvious is . . . ” Which is what kept me turning the pages. This is a rare book, stylistically speaking, but then again, Tom Kristensen is a rare guy.

And speaking of photographs, the photography in this book is fantastic. There are tons of candid shots (with the family, with teammates, behind the scenes, and such) but many great racing shots with excellent color reproduction. There are shots where you didn’t know a person could look that tired and photos of unreserved joy.

Mr. Le Mans: Tom Kristensen
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As an Amazon Associate, Automoblog earns from qualifying purchases.

Between 1997 and 2014, Tom Kristensen won the world’s toughest motor race, the 24 Hours of Le Mans, a record nine times and finished on the podium on five more occasions.

Now retired, Kristensen shares his deepest personal reflections and insights, both on and off the track.

Kristensen also tells of the battles and setbacks over the years that sometimes seemed impossible to overcome, including a terrible accident in 2007.

Worth Every Penny

This book is rare in today’s world of prefab honesty and pre-packaged emotions; it’s True with a capital T. Although this book proves that Tom Kristensen is Mr. Le Mans, it also shows that he is, more than anything else, just himself.

If you are hungry for more great car books, we have showcased dozens of titles as part of our Book Garage series

Longtime Automoblog writer Tony Borroz has worked on popular driving games as a content expert, in addition to working for aerospace companies, software giants, and as a movie stuntman. He lives in the northeast corner of the northwestern-most part of the Pacific Northwest.

Mr. Le Mans: Tom Kristensen Info

Hardcover: 432 pages

ISBN-10: 8797260304

ISBN-13: 978-8797260302

Item Weight: 2.6 lbs.

Dimensions: 7.25 x 1.77 x 9.88 inches

Publisher: Evro Publishing Limited

Original article: Mr. Le Mans, Tom Kristensen Tells All In His In-Depth & Dynamic Autobiography

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