Too Old for Motor Racing
A Short Story in Case I Didn’t Live Long Enough to Finish Writing a Longer One
by
Book Details
About the Book
We all have dreams of what we want to do and who we want to become. Many of us eventually decide it is too late; we have missed our chances. But is it ever really too late to try?
Don Simpson does not think so. In his memoir, Too Old for Motor Racing, he tells the story of how he became a race car driver at the age of sixty-two. Simpson is an ordinary man from a regular family; he spent his early years living on a council estate in Liverpool, UK. He attended the school at the end of his street, leaving as soon as he could. As a young man with a young family, he could not indulge in his passion for motor racing except as a spectator; racing was simply too expensive and risky for someone with a family to take care of. Later in life, however, Simpson discovered limits are almost always imagined, not real. At the age of sixty-two, he began to race.
Although your passion may be for something other than motor racing, this memoir seeks to inspire you to go after your dreams, because it is never too late to try.
About the Author
Don Simpson is an Englishman in his sixties, living in Perth, Western Australia. He is an inspector on an offshore rig and a qualified hypnotherapist. Despite a love of fast cars and motorcycles from an early age, he only recently decided to try racing them and is now living his dream. Visit him online at www.2old4mr.com.