Predicted by site founder Robert Farago when few people thought it could actually happen, GM’s bankruptcy is now history. So, time for the histories.
Paul Ingrassia certainly seems qualified to provide one. The Wall Street Journal’s man in Detroit for years, he won a Pulitzer (with Joseph White) for his coverage of the auto industry’s early 1990’s brush with disaster and subsequent recovery. That coverage provided the basis for 1994’s Comeback: the Fall and Rise of the American Automobile Industry, a definitive account of that period.
Does Crash Course: the American Automobile Industry’s Road from Glory to Disaster similarly deserve a place on your bookshelf?
Well, it depends. Did you know: (Read More…)






Recent Comments
gslippy - Preach it, brother.
Michael Karesh - Those are significant differences in length and width. The lower height reflected the car’s old school packaging.
18726543 - I actually wrenched for Nissan back when this car hit the showrooms and I always thought adding such a strong V6 option was a horrible idea. I...
Michael Karesh - The SHO wasn’t priced to sell in volume. The GM supercharged cars weren’t seen as entirely up-to-date due to pushrods and...
gslippy - I think you’re right. What seems to talk today is the collusion between big businesses...
thesal - I think the city planners are onto something. If a place is designed with more...
Lorenzo - Urban planners don’t create vibrant urban communities. The best ones were created by the...
redav - Of course that was the trend, but what defines the limit?
redav - I would say where most people really need horsepower is when passing.
sportyaccordy - Nissan seems to have a problem with rear spring sag. Stock springs have been droopy since the ’95 Maxima