Jenson Button Popular Books

Jenson Button Biography & Facts

Jenson Alexander Lyons Button (born 19 January 1980) is a British racing driver currently competing in the 2024 FIA World Endurance Championship with Hertz Team Jota. He won the 2009 Formula One World Championship when he drove for the Brawn GP team. After his F1 career, he became champion of the 2018 season of the Super GT Series alongside Naoki Yamamoto, with whom he shared a Honda racing car at Team Kunimitsu. He currently competes part-time in the NASCAR Cup Series, driving the No. 15 Ford Mustang for Rick Ware Racing with support from Stewart-Haas Racing and sponsorship from Mobil 1. Button began karting at the age of eight and achieved early success, before progressing to car racing in the British Formula Ford Championship and the British Formula 3 Championship. He first drove in F1 with Williams for the 2000 season. The following year he switched to Benetton, which at the start of the 2002 season became the Renault team, and then for the 2003 season he moved to BAR. He finished third in the 2004 World Drivers' Championship, before falling to ninth in the 2005 championship. BAR was subsequently renamed and became the Honda team for the 2006 season, during which Button won his first Grand Prix at the Hungarian Grand Prix, after 113 races. Following the withdrawal of Honda from the sport in December 2008, Button was left without a team for the 2009 season. In February 2009, Ross Brawn led a management buyout of Honda, creating Brawn GP and recruiting Button as a driver. Button went on to win a record-equalling six of the first seven races of the 2009 season, securing the World Drivers' Championship at the Brazilian Grand Prix, having led on points all season; his success also helped Brawn GP to secure the World Constructors' Championship. At the start of the 2010 season, he moved to McLaren, partnering fellow British racer Lewis Hamilton. After finishing fifth for the team in 2010, Button ended the 2011 season as runner-up, before falling to fifth in the 2012 championship. Four more seasons with McLaren resulted in no further victories and he retired from Formula One at the end of 2016, making a one-off return at the 2017 Monaco Grand Prix to deputise for Fernando Alonso. From the 306 races that Button started, he won 15, qualified on pole position 8 times, took 50 podium finishes and scored 1,235 championship points. Early life and education Button was born on 19 January 1980 in Frome, Somerset and brought up in nearby Vobster, Mells. He is the fourth child of the half-South African Simone Lyons and former rallycross driver John Button from London's East End, who was well known in the United Kingdom during most of the 1970s for racing his Volkswagen Type 1, which was nicknamed the Colorado Beetle. Jenson's parents met in Newquay at a young age and were reunited after a musical concert at Longleat. According to John, Jenson was named after his Danish friend and rallycross opponent Erling Jensen, changing the "e" to an "o" to differentiate it from Jensen Motors, while Simone recalls that she named him Jenson after noticing a Jensen sports car and thought the change of spelling would be "more mannish". Button enjoyed racing from an early age, racing a BMX bike with friends after school, and began watching Formula One (F1) motor racing with his father around the age of five or six. He idolised four-time world champion Alain Prost for his calm personality and intellectual approach to driving. After his parents divorced when he was seven, he and his three elder sisters were brought up by their mother in Frome. Button was educated at Vallis First School, Selwood Middle School and Frome Community College. His karting career limited his studying and he left school with one GCSE. Button failed his first driving test for driving between two cars on a narrow road. Karting career Button's father gave him a 50cc bike for his seventh birthday; he discarded it after half an hour because it lacked speed, which would have required his father to remove its restrictor, and he disliked his father's idea of progressing to the 80cc category. John talked to rallycross driver and Ripspeed car accessories owner Keith Ripp at an Earl's Court racing car show about his son; Kipp recommended the purchase of a Zip go-kart suited for the newly formed Cadets class for eight to twelve year-old karters for the young boy. Button received the kart as a Christmas present in 1987 and he began karting at the Clay Pigeon Raceway in May 1988 aged eight following repeated questions by club members to his father on when Button would start racing. He was required to drive on slick tyres on a wet track because his father wanted him to learn car control on a sodden surface and taught him basic driving techniques by standing at a corner and pointing to where his son should brake. In 1989, aged nine, Button won the British Super Prix. Midway through the year, his father spoke to him about progressing to the club level since others noticed he was competitive, which Button was interested in. He won all 34 races of the 1991 British Cadet Kart Championship and the title with team Wright Karts. Afterwards Button told his father his objective was to compete in F1 and he was given a map to chart his progress in karting. The two agreed to give each other more autonomy and Button was mentored by mechanic Dave Spencer in moving from the Cadets to Juniors class. Spencer told him to be more aggressive and less smooth driving Junior karts because they have more power than a Cadet kart. Button was also required to manage the condition of his tyres to retain grip. Further successes followed, including three British Open Kart Championship wins. A series of sub-par performances in 1992 gave Button doubts over his ability to win races and he told his father he wanted to continue racing after dismissing the suggestion of two months away from karting. The family telephoned Spencer for advice; he and Button's father constructed the young boy's karts and influenced his school headteacher to change his fitness regime and had to eschew unhealthy beverages. Spencer helped him to observe and concentrate on how others drove their karts, and continued to coach Button until his youngest son Danny died in a multi-kart accident at the Hunts Kart Racing Club in Kimbolton, Cambridgeshire in December 1994. Button was fourth in the 1994 RAC British Junior Championship after losing the opportunity to claim the title through a series of accidents. He joined the Birel team for that year's Junior Intercontinental A European Championship and raced as a professional in the Junior Intercontinental A Italian Winter Championship. He was the youngest runner-up of the Formula A World Championship at age 15. Button was signed to drive Tecno-Rotax karts for Team GKS, coming fifth in the 1996 European Formula A Championship, third in the Formula A World Cup, and third in the American Championship. In 1997, he was moved to the top-level of karting .... Discover the Jenson Button popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Jenson Button books.

Best Seller Jenson Button Books of 2024

  • Williams synopsis, comments

    Williams

    Maurice Hamilton

    A story of true drive – now the topic of a major documentaryFounded in 1977 by Sir Frank Williams and Patrick Head, Williams F1 represents the last of the true independent teams; a...

  • The Great Race synopsis, comments

    The Great Race

    Aaron Noonan

    The cars, the stars, the thrills and the spills from 60 years of the Bathurst classic by Australia's premier motorsports journalist with a foreword by fivetime winner Garth TanderT...

  • Born to be Riled synopsis, comments

    Born to be Riled

    Jeremy Clarkson

    Born to be Riled is a collection of hilarious vintage journalism from Jeremy Clarkson. Jeremy Clarkson, it has to said, sometimes finds the world a maddening place. And nowhere mor...

  • The Fastest Show on Earth synopsis, comments

    The Fastest Show on Earth

    Chicane

    In the quest for ultimate speed, Formula One combines human drama, cuttingedge technological innovation and highstakes finance in a thrilling global circus watched by half a billio...

  • Bright Morning synopsis, comments

    Bright Morning

    Don Haworth

    A sequel to "Figures in a Bygone Landscape", which traced the author's childhood in the 1920s, this volume recaptures the world of the 1930s in Lancashire. Don Haworth ...

  • Becoming a Lion synopsis, comments

    Becoming a Lion

    Johnny Sexton

    Johnny Sexton the man who pulled the strings for the Lions gives an intimate insight into the rugby life in Becoming a Lion.With three Heineken Cups and one British and Irish Li...

  • Best Seat in the House synopsis, comments

    Best Seat in the House

    Neil Crompton

    Racer and broadcaster Neil Crompton has had the best seat in the house for the last 40 years of Australian motorsport, an amazing lifetime upgrade to a firsthand, front row seat to...

  • The Jenson Button Quiz Book synopsis, comments

    The Jenson Button Quiz Book

    Chris Cowlin

    Did you watch British driver Jensen Button win the world championship title in 2009? Have you followed his Formula 1 career on the circuit? Would you like to know more about the po...

  • Donald Campbell synopsis, comments

    Donald Campbell

    David Tremayne

    Generations are familiar with the haunting black and white television footage of Donald Campbell somersaulting to his death in his famous Bluebird boat on Coniston Water in January...

  • What Could Possibly Go Wrong. . . synopsis, comments

    What Could Possibly Go Wrong. . .

    Jeremy Clarkson

    What Could Possibly Go Wrong... is the sixth book in Jeremy Clarkson's bestselling The World According to Clarkson series.No one writes about cars like Jeremy Clarkson. While most ...

  • Motorworld synopsis, comments

    Motorworld

    Jeremy Clarkson

    Jeremy Clarkson invites us to Motorworld, his take on different cultures and the cars that they drive.There are ways and means of getting about that don't involve four wheels, but ...

  • How to Win a Grand Prix synopsis, comments

    How to Win a Grand Prix

    Bernie Collins

    Racewinning team strategist shows how F1 really works. Welcome to Bernie Collins' world. Formula 1 drivers are the public face of Grand Prix racing but behind every driver is a te...

  • Monaco synopsis, comments

    Monaco

    Malcolm Folley

    THE ONLY DEFINITIVE ACCOUNT OF THE WORLD'S GREATEST RACE FULL OF EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEWS WITH NIKI LAUDA, ROSS BRAWN, DAMON HILL, DAVID COULTHARD, SIR JACKIE STEWART, OLIVER PANIS AN...

  • Winning Is Not Enough synopsis, comments

    Winning Is Not Enough

    Sir Jackie Stewart

    Sir Jackie Stewart is one of the most highly regarded names in global sport winner of three F1 World Championships, 27 Grands Prix and ranked in the top five drivers of all time. ...

  • I Know You Got Soul synopsis, comments

    I Know You Got Soul

    Jeremy Clarkson

    In I Know You Got Soul, Jeremy Clarkson writes about the machines that he believes have 'soul'. It will come as no surprise to anyone that Jeremy Clarkson loves machines. But it's ...

  • Taking on Gravity synopsis, comments

    Taking on Gravity

    Richard Browning

    As seen on Top Gear'Richard Browning is a reallife Tony Stark.' WiredFor fans of Adrian Newey, Guy Martin and Chris Hadfield, in Taking on Gravity inventor Richard Browning tells ...

  • The Mechanic synopsis, comments

    The Mechanic

    Marc 'Elvis' Priestley

    Meet Marc 'Elvis' Priestley: the former numberone McLaren mechanic, and the brains behind some of Formula One's greatest ever drivers.Revealing the most outrageous secrets and fier...

  • Playfair Cricket Annual 2012 synopsis, comments

    Playfair Cricket Annual 2012

    Ian Marshall

    The 65th edition of the PLAYFAIR CRICKET ANNUAL reviews England's two triumphant 2011 home Test series against Sri Lanka and India, as well as their autumn/winter matches against I...

  • How to be Formula One Champion synopsis, comments

    How to be Formula One Champion

    Richard Porter

    The first and only practical guide on how to become F1 Champion, for the millions of Grand Prix fans who have always dreamed of making it onto the podium. Are you the next Lewis Ha...

  • We Need to Weaken the Mixture synopsis, comments

    We Need to Weaken the Mixture

    Guy Martin

    The millioncopy selling truck fitter returnsFeatured on Channel 4'I can't stop biting off more than I can chew. Maybe I'm wearing everything out, but I believe the body is a fantas...

  • Speed synopsis, comments

    Speed

    Guy Martin

    Guy Martin, lorry mechanic, motorcycle racing legend and favourite of the Isle of Man TT, lives for the buzz he feels racing his bike round terrifying bends at 200mph. Nothing, he ...

  • Built for Speed synopsis, comments

    Built for Speed

    John McGuinness

    Go on the ride of your life with the racing legend himselfwith a thrilling NEW CHAPTER on John’s dramatic 2017 crash‘Then I was there myself, just another face in the crowd, watch...

  • Survive. Drive. Win. synopsis, comments

    Survive. Drive. Win.

    Nick Fry

    'The story of Brawn GP is legendary... Exciting and magical.' Damon Hill'Nick Fry and Ed Gorman take us behind the mysterious and tightly closed doors of F1 to tell the remarkable ...

  • Driven to Distraction synopsis, comments

    Driven to Distraction

    Jeremy Clarkson

    Jeremy Clarkson is once more Driven to Distraction.Brace yourself. Clarkson's back.And he'd like to tell you what he thinks about some of the most aweinspiring, earthshatteringly f...

  • Driven synopsis, comments

    Driven

    Kevin Eason

    Formula One is speed, glamour, danger and eyewatering wealth. Driven: The Men Who Made Formula One tells how a small group of extraordinary men transformed Formula One from a nich...