The Woman and the Car: A Chatty Little Handbook for all Women Who Motor or Who Want to Motor is a book by Dorothy Levitt, first published in 1909.
Dorothy Levitt demonstrates how to prime the carburettor, dressed in her own design of blue "dust-coat"
Dorothy Elizabeth Levitt was a British racing driver and journalist. She was the first British woman racing driver, holder of the world's first water speed record, the women's world land speed record holder, and an author. She was a pioneer of female independence and female motoring and taught Queen Alexandra and the Royal Princesses how to drive. In 1905, she established the record for the longest drive achieved by a lady driver by driving a De Dion-Bouton from London to Liverpool and back over two days, receiving the soubriquets in the press of the Fastest Girl on Earth, and the Champion Lady Motorist of the World.
Levitt on the frontispiece of The Woman and the Car
Dorothy Levitt and the 12 hp Gladiator car she drove in a series of reliability trials in 1903
Dorothy Levitt, in a 26 hp Napier, at Brooklands, 1908
Dorothy Levitt driving the Napier motor yacht, 1903