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I should mention that the Ecclestone book along with Brawn's "Total Competition lessons in strategy" are audio books.
Along with "Jenson Button life to the limit" and Newey's How to Build a Car", "The Mechanic the Secret World of the F1 Pitlane" by Marc 'Elvis' Priestley, "Full Throttle the life and Fast Times of Curtis Turner", "Driving With the Devil southern moonshiners, Detroit wheels and the Birth of NASCAR", "Go Like Hell Ford, Ferrari and Their Battle for Speed and Glory at Le Mans" and "Jeff Gordon his Dream Drive & Destiny", 'The Limit Life and Death on the 1981 Grand Prix Circuit" by Michael Canell
All great reads or in my case listens.
Full Throttle: The Life and Fast Times of NASCAR Legend Curtis Turner is one of my all-time favorite books.
Its amazing that this thread is now at page 3 without the mention of Giorgio Piolas yearly publications of "Formula 1 technical analysis"
I think that in terms of technical review and also beaty of drawings they are the best series of contemporary F1 cars.
Though, sadly expensive to collect.
There is another series called "Formula 1 car by car" written Peter Higham and published by Evro in UK, however, the series is misstated.
The series, while full of high quality pictures of each car, is really a description of the teams' performance "race by race" with little technical information about the cars themselves. But the information is concise and accurate so that it is a better resource than wikipedia at times.
A better resource for historical F1 cars I could recommend would be "History of the Grand Prix car 1966-91" by Doug Nye. Sadly, there were no books of the time before or since, but other books mentioned in this tread would fill in that blank.
The only way to close a stupid question is to give a smart answer