Enrico Nardi, A fast life By Dino Brunori-Andrea Curami
Fondazione Negri, Brescia 2009 ISBN 88-80108-17-7
Hardbound, 198 pages, B&W and color
82.00 USD Illustrations above by Attilio Cariati
Sorry, ALL SOLD OUT for now…thank you for your orders!
Review by Pete Vack
Photos from the Dino Brunori Archives
Enrico Nardi would probably be bemused at the attention he continues to receive some 43 years after his death in 1966. More at home in the shop than in social situations, money, fame, or gold watches did not impress him much. One day, a well-dressed foreigner arrived at Nardi’s tiny garage in Turin, condescendingly asking a mechanic in coveralls to speak to the master.
The mechanic sent him into the boss’s office, where Pal, the shop’s Alsatian watchdog was sitting, and the mechanic locked the growling dog with the visitor. Nardi told his employees to “let the master educate this chap,” and left the terrified visitor for a half an hour before unlocking the door. The mechanic, of course, was Nardi himself. A born practical joker, he took his daughter Roberta to the Paris Exhibition but told everyone that the beautiful young girl was his fiancé, which was news to those who knew Nardi as a married man.
Roberta Nardi herself was surprised by the fact that there still was someone interested in her father. Author Dino Brunori met her a year before her death in 2006 and found her very eager to help. “She didn’t have a great deal of material, but she told me several facts about her father’s life and gave me a few pictures of the young Enrico, which appear in the book.”
Brunori puts together enough anecdotes about Nardi to allow the reader to get a fair grasp on what made Nardi—and his products—famous, literally getting Enrico Nardi out from behind the legendary steering wheel. He depends a great deal on interviews with old Nardi veterans Gino Munaron and Gino Velanzano to provide background information. Nardi was, Brunori writes, “meticulous, stubborn, quarrelsome, hot tempered but also courageous.”
Famed as he was for accessories and in particular, steering wheels, Enrico Nardi was also the driving force behind some sixty unique racing cars, sports, grand touring cars, formula cars and showcars. Brunori covers just about every one, and reveals Nardi’s relationship with both Vincenzo Lancia and Enzo Ferrari before the war. Weaving Enrico’s sparkling personality between the cars he helped create, Brunori tracks down the successes drivers achieved while racing NDs—Nardi-Danese cars. It is the fascinating and human story of one of Italy’s postwar “miracles.” It has a precedent, for in 1987, Franco Varisco published a slim volume about Nardi, “Nardi, A story of cars and steering wheels”, but Brunori’s new book is in an entirely different league.
Some readers and fussy old historians want to have their books like a fast food chain—close by, their way and instant fact-gratification. But Brunori (interviewed via email) is the first to admit he is neither a writer nor a historian. “I’m an architect and run a small retail design firm. ‘Enrico Nardi’ is my first (and probably last) work. Only passion drove my efforts,” he wrote. In fact he asked famed Italian historian Andrea Curami to help with the material and get the book completed.
The result is a passionate story, in roughly chronological order. But if you want to know what happened to, for example, Nardi’s first car, nicknamed “Boby” for his daughter, you will find reference to it on page 30 which corresponds to the year 1947. The next mention of Boby is on page 94, when in 1951 Boby was converted to a Giaur by way of Taraschi. In 1952, on page 106, we find the now Crosley powered car in the hands of Frank Dominianni. It all makes perfect sense if read chronologically, and in fact is a joy to read through. But without an index it makes life a bit difficult at times, and alas, there is no index.
There is, however a remarkable compendium of races in which Nardi cars participated in after WWII. The date of the race, the name, the class, model, chassis number, car number in the event, driver and co-driver and the finishing position are all listed, from 1947 to 1957. It is a wealth of information and most welcome.
Having a full English version is also very welcome. It is for the most part, very well done. We’d be picky but it is so refreshing to get an all-English edition we refuse to have anything but praise for the effort. We also noted that either the author or translator exhibited a rare sense of humor which was appropriate and enjoyable. But was it intentional or were we reading between the lines? So we asked Brunori, lest we make hasty assumptions. “You are correct. I wrote that way and asked Paul Etgart to translate it literally word by word and not to adapt the Italian to some sort of academic English. I feel he matched my request perfectly.” Good going, Dino.
For the chassis information, John de Boer came to the rescue. We see his fine hand and mind as the book tries to sort out the various Nardi cars and how they were numbered. “Without his help the history of Nardi cars in the USA would still be full of question marks. He was a cornerstone in my work. We met a couple of times in the last few years and we mutually benefited from each other work, sharing our researches. Last April he was here for four days and he revised the work, suggested some changes and amendments.” There were others, such as Cliff Reuter, who were glad to help and their names are in the front of the book. Once the book is more widely distributed, more information will no doubt surface, particularly about the American side of Nardi.
After 198 interesting pages full of unpublished photos, descriptions, ads, and race statistics, Brunori divulges a tragic fact—in the 1970s, the Nardi family pulled out of the business entirely, and the new owners threw almost everything away. “Drawings, records, pictures, documents, spare parts—throw them away! Anything anyone wants something is welcome to take it, the rest will go in the garbage bin.” Fortunately, there are guys like Brunori around, who sought out what was left and saved it. He now has a large part of the original Nardi archive; company books, factory registers, original drawings, documents, dozen of letters and about 700 pictures which served as the basis for his remarkable book. “Nardi, A fast life”, is indispensable for the Italian car enthusiast and a true Gottahave.
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