Dr Thillainathan Pathmanathan's fascination with Lamborghinis was spiked at the age of eight by the Marzal concept car and has never waned since. His primary interest is in the wedge-shaped, longitudinal mid-engined, spaceframe-chassised, Bizzarrini-engined, Lamborghini flagships. He has authored the world's first stand-alone books on the KTM X-BOW and Lamborghini Murcielago, and has written books on the Countach and Diablo as well as a dodecalogy of travel inspired socio-politico-economic essays. Dr Pathmanathan boarded at Cheltenham College, then obtained his medical degree from Pembroke College, University of Cambridge, with a degree in Physiology from the University of London en-route. He trained as an eye surgeon in London, Southampton and Liverpool before undertaking a specialist Glaucoma Fellowship at the University of Toronto and was appointed a Consultant Eye Surgeon in 1999. He has nurtured Countach Chassis JLA12399, a totally factory standard Rosso Siviglia 88 1/2 5000 QV - one of only 14 such right-hand drive cars in the world – since 2001, and Murcielago Chassis 1564 - an unaltered Arancio Atlas 2005 Roadster - since 2014. His most precious automotive memories are of interviewing Paolo Stanzani, Giampaolo Dallara, Umberto Marchesi, and Marcello Gandini. Dr Anne Christina Reck’s every visit to Sant' Agata, and every encounter with the people who conceived, developed and built Lamborghini’s Holy Trinity, uniquely mesmerised her. Dr Reck has co-authored books on the KTM X-BOW, Countach and Diablo and a dodecalogy of travel inspired socio-politico-economic essays. Dr Reck graduated from the University of Copenhagen, trained as an eye surgeon in London and Southampton, and did a specialist Retinal Fellowship at Moorfields before being appointed a Consultant Eye Surgeon in 1999. Her most abiding car memories include the Murcielago factory launch, watching the last Diablo being built, and first setting eyes on the spaceship-like Countach.