The super saloon was the car that refused to choose between responsibility and rebellion. It had rear doors, proper seats, luggage space, comfort, and the manners of an executive machine, yet beneath that sensible shape lived the performance to challenge sports cars. It was the family car with a secret, the business saloon with bad intentions, and the motorway weapon that proved practicality did not have to mean surrender.
The Forgotten Super Saloon: The Four-Door Car That Took on Sports Cars explores the rise, glory, decline, and rediscovery of one of motoring's most fascinating ideas. From early sporting saloons and gentleman's expresses to turbocharged legends, V8 muscle machines, all-weather performance cars, super estates, hybrids, and electric instant-torque saloons, this book tells the story of how ordinary-looking four-door cars became some of the most complete performance machines ever built.
This is a book about engineering compromise, hidden speed, public controversy, collector passion, and the enduring appeal of cars that could carry passengers in comfort while making sports cars nervous. It is for readers who understand that performance is not always loud, low, or obvious. Sometimes the most interesting car in the car park is the one pretending to be sensible.
Disclaimer
This book is an independent, unofficial work of automotive history and commentary. It is not authorised, sponsored, endorsed, or approved by any vehicle manufacturer, performance division, tuning company, racing organisation, trademark owner, or related corporate entity mentioned or discussed. All manufacturer names, model names, badges, and trademarks remain the property of their respective owners and are used only for identification, historical reference, and commentary.