The New York Times Book Review (NYTBR) features “How’s My Driving?” by Paris Steve Dziadik
Paris Steve Dziadik’s informative masterpiece, “How’s My Driving?,” was featured in the July issue of The New York Times Book Review.
Current non-fiction and fiction books are reviewed in The New York Times Book Review (NYTBR), a weekly paper magazine supplement to the Sunday edition of The New York Times (an American daily newspaper with a worldwide readership reported in 2020 to be a growing 6 million paid digital subscribers). It is one of the most well-known and significant book reviews in the business.
The most basic goal of “How’s My Driving?” is to remind you of what you already know about driving safely but may have just temporarily forgotten or haven’t used it for a long time.
The author, Steve Dziadik, has a driving history that includes two life-threatening accidents early on that he and his family were fortunate enough to survive. For the last 13 years, he has owned and operated a driving school in Florida, teaching defensive driving techniques to thousands of young people as well as older drivers.
His life experiences and unique perspective on driving safety have created a combination in him that makes what he says both instructional and interesting.
The author and his wife were interviewed by Logan Crawford on Spotlight TV to discuss this book. Logan Crawford, the host of the program, is an actor and Emmy Award-winning anchor, reporter, talk show host, and actor with recurring roles on such hit TV shows as Blue Bloods, The Blacklist, House of Cards, Person of Interest, and The First Purge.
“How’s My Driving?” is a book set to encourage readers to increase their level of defensive driving awareness. The author utilizes some of his family’s unfortunate driving experiences wherever possible for added emphasis. The benefit to the reader is an opportunity to feel the pain his family felt and learn from it.
There’s a chapter called “Automobile Insurance 101” that breaks coverage down in a way that is both palatable and useful. Finding out after a crash what protection should have been in place is tragic. “Driving safely is no accident.” Understanding and practicing that phrase will result in a safer and happier commute for everyone.
The author hopes that at the end of this book, you will understand and maybe even appreciate how the goals of the book could be beneficial to you if you personalize and share what you feel with others around you by operating your vehicle more safely.