If you love Formula One, chances are you also love the cars, the travel, the drama, and the people behind it all. So why not give your coffee table a proper upgrade with two excellent F1‑focused books? They sit somewhere between glossy coffee‑table time and serious sporting read.
Here are two titles worth adding to your collection: F1 Racing Confidential: Inside Stories from the World of Formula One by Giles Richards, and F1 Racing: The Ultimate Companion – 75th Anniversary Edition by Bruce Jones.

F1 Racing Confidential is not another dry “history of the sport” book. Rather, it is a set of around 20 interviews with a broad cross‑section of people who make Formula One work. These range from team principals and drivers to engineers, strategists, and pit‑lane crew.
The British journalist Giles Richards, who has covered F1 for the Guardian for more than a decade, uses his paddock access to illuminate what life looks like inside the garages, trucks, and team‑hubs. These are areas that fans rarely see.

This F1‑focused book deliberately steps away from talking only to the usual TV‑friendly faces. Alongside heavy‑hitters such as Toto Wolff and Christian Horner, you get time with data engineers, comms managers, mechanics, esports specialists, and more.
This diversity is one of its strengths: it shows how modern F1 is less a “driver‑centric” show and more a 1,000‑strong global operation built on collaboration.

At just over 300 pages and written in a relaxed, interview‑style format, this F1‑focused book feels closer to a series of longform paddock chats than a formal biography or textbook.
It’s ideal for someone who already follows F1 but wants to understand things like:
Richards also avoids jargon, so it’s easy to read on a train, a sofa, or even in the middle of a break at work.
Buy here.

While F1 Racing Confidential zooms in on the people, F1 Racing: The Ultimate Companion zooms out to capture the sport’s geography, culture, and history on a global scale.
Written by Bruce Jones, former editor of Autosport, this 75th‑anniversary edition is laid out as a visual, country‑by‑country guide to Formula One. It covers 48 nations that have either produced a Grand Prix driver or hosted a race across six continents.

Each country gets its own chapter, roughly organised by region (Europe, Americas, Asia and Middle East, Africa, Oceania).
Within each chapter you’ll find:
This F1‑focused book also includes circuit diagrams, timeline snippets, and facts such as how many drivers a nation has generated. In addition, it shows how many races its tracks have hosted.

Hardie Grant markets this as a “beautifully illustrated reference book”, and that’s not marketing speak. The pages are packed with photographs of cars, tracks, and fans, alongside clear maps and colour‑coded layouts.

F1 Racing: The Ultimate Companion is especially useful for three kinds of readers:

If you put both titles side by side, they create a neat F1 “pair” for any Formula 1 enthusiast:
| Feature | F1 Racing Confidential | F1 Racing: The Ultimate Companion |
| Main focus | People and roles inside modern F1 teams | Geography, history, and circuits |
| Format | Interview‑based chapters | Illustrated country‑by‑country guide |
| Style | Conversational, narrative‑driven | Visual, reference‑style |
| Best for | Insight into paddock life and team dynamics | Understanding F1’s global footprint |
| Typical reader level | Fans who already follow F1 closely | New and intermediate fans plus visual‑learning readers |

For someone who enjoys beautiful, powerful, and stylish cars, these two F1‑focused books offer more than just stats. They explain the human ecosystem around those machines (Richards) and the global stage on which they compete (Jones).
Both titles also work well as conversation pieces. Flip to Monaco in The Ultimate Companion and show a friend how a tiny principality built a world‑famous circuit out of harbour roads and harbour lights. Or open F1 Racing Confidential to the Lando Norris chapter and talk about how a driver’s mindset can shape a season as much as the car’s engine.
We thoroughly enjoyed both these books. They both get a double thumbs up from me. If you were building a small F1 library, which angle would you prefer first: the inside‑the‑paddock stories of F1 Racing Confidential, or the globe‑trotting, country‑by‑country journey of F1 Racing: The Ultimate Companion?
Let us know in the comments – we’d love to hear which F1 titles you’ve enjoyed most.

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