Trains and Railroads Books
Related Subjects: History Miniature Organizations
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Used price: $25.90

not quite what ya expectReview Date: 2008-08-16
helpful book, living proofReview Date: 2004-03-09
what, now your ready to ride??????Review Date: 2003-03-24
Sage Advice from a savvy, veteran TrainhopperReview Date: 2001-10-09
Invaluable for the Freight HopperReview Date: 2004-08-29
I have a few reservations, however. While I wouldn't call it outdated, it does show a few signs of age. It mentions the possibility of riding on automobile carriers, for instance. It would be inadvisable to do this even were it feasible, but with the new designs of car carrier, it is next to impossible to ride one. There are other instances of Littlejohn's writing bearing the stamp of age, but fortunately, not very many of them concern vital things. In other words, most of what is dated is either relatively unimportant to the actual practice of freight hopping or still viable with the application of some common sense (which you'll need a lot of to ride the rails successfully anyway).
In addition, the book skimps on some aspects of modern freight hopping, such as radio frequency scanning, but this is no big deal. In my opinion, Littlejohn is wise to concentrate on the more fundamental aspects of hopping freights.
This book will start preparing you for hopping freights. If you take the advice in this book, start small, supplement it with information from the Web (for instance, the freight hoppers e-mail list at train-hoppers@nw.com ), & practice, you should be well on your way. Moreover, once you have caught out a few times, you can return to the book often to hone your skills.
A valuable book, highly recommended.

Used price: $0.55

YOU NEED this book !Review Date: 2008-10-03
He , eventually, could read it to me and always remainded one of his favorite books.
We LOVE this bookReview Date: 2008-08-23
Ok but not SO catchy.Review Date: 2008-04-09
Big Dog/Little Dog Review Date: 2007-12-26
A classic that withstands the test of timeReview Date: 2007-08-12

Used price: $4.45

A Good Picture Book for Those in Need of Toy Train NostalgiaReview Date: 2000-11-25
For those who know Lionel as a company and as a product well, this volume will probably prove to be disappointing. It is an "overview of the company's development and the way its products reflect the eras in which they were produced." Now, there's nothing wrong with that, but those who know Lionel well already have that perspective. So if you are an expert, I suggest that you avoid this book.
The strength of of this book lies in the photographs by Bill Milne. He has done a fine job of capturing the child's eye view of the cars and accessories. You can almost feel the rug pressing against your cheek as you remember lying sideways to get a closer look at ground level of someone else's new set.
Many of the pieces I had not seen before, especially from the 70s and on. If I had a place to put a set, I'd almost be tempted to make a belated start.
I was pretty familiar with Lionel over the last 50 years, so it was the early years that added to my knowledge. The founder, Joshua Lionel Cohen (later changed to Cowen), was interesting to me. He had a good technical background for toy trains, having been educated at Cooper Union and partially completing degree work in engineering at Columbia. His first job was for Acme Electric Light Company, which made many small electric appliances. He developed a way to ignite magnesium more evenly, and used that to found his own company to make fuses for the military. This led to a light for illuminating plants, a fan, and finally a battery-powered train. The rest is history.
The text comes across like something out of a fan magazine more than as a legitimate history. As an "authorized" version, undoubtedly the people at Lionel had some influence. I graded the book down one star for lack of insight into what all of this history means.
Think about how toys create aspirations and lives. What toys created what aspirations in you? Did an erector set cause you to take engineering courses? Did a microscope help establish a career in biology? If you had a toy train, how did that influence you?
What gifts should you give your children and grandchildren this holiday season to make for the best aspirations in their lives for the years ahead?
The ultimate guide to LionelReview Date: 2000-08-16
A "must" for all dedicated Lionel fans and train set buffs.Review Date: 2000-06-04
Lionel, a good legacy but not the qualityReview Date: 2000-07-11
Lowbrow puff piece does Lionel no JusticeReview Date: 2000-10-22

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Awesome for babies and toddlersReview Date: 2008-06-05
Daughter likes it !Review Date: 2007-04-07
The Little Engine That CouldReview Date: 2007-03-12
great abridged version for the littlest readersReview Date: 2006-05-21
A Perfect Version for Little OnesReview Date: 2005-12-09
The colors are bright and cheerful, the shape is fun for little hands to hold, and the prose is eagerly anticipated time after time -- especially with sound effects from the reader. :) And although it is abridged, the "I think I can!" message of the original story still comes through loud and clear.
For older children or those with longer attention spans, buy the full-length version. But for rollicking fun with your baby or toddler, I recommend this version.

Used price: $18.00

Generally ExcellentReview Date: 2008-01-16
I only have two problems with the book. First, it isn't exactly comprehensive. Second, many of the suggested photo locations aren't located in publicly accessible areas - a lot has changed for train watchers since 9/11, and most class I's aren't as accommodating as they once were.
Overall this is an excellent resource, although it could certainly be improved with a second edition.
Rockin the yards!Review Date: 2006-11-03
Lack of definitions of terms.Review Date: 2007-05-01
Comes up shortReview Date: 2007-07-15
Very niceReview Date: 2006-07-31

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Great Nostalgia Ahead!Review Date: 2003-03-19
Roy Cohn was the grandson of Joshua Lionel Cowen...Review Date: 2005-09-13
Frank Pettit, chief designer for Lionel Trains and my uncle, had over 100 patents for designs and innovations he created for toys, expecially trains, including the smoke tablet, cattle car, news-stand, a transformer, etc. Amazon lists his biography "It Comes From Within: The Frank Pettit Story." This is an accurate story of the Lionel Trains Corp.
My entire family; mother, father, uncles, aunts, from the Caruso/Pagano family worked at Lionel Trains, located in Irvington, New Jersey during the 1950's, which was the largest toy company in the world. During World War II, Lionel Corp. developed and manufactured instruments for the navy.
The company was bought by the lawyer, Roy Cohn, grandson of Lionel Trains founder Lionel Cowen (Cowen & Cohn are very similar names). Roy Cohn immediately fired everyone and stated that "We are out of the toy business." To this day, nobody knows where the pension fund went. All the money was taken out of the company. My mom and dad, my relatives and others never received a penny of their pension that they worked so hard for.
Read this fascinating history of what was once the largest toy manufacturing company in the world.
The Definitive (and Readable) History of Lionel TrainsReview Date: 2004-01-28
Hollander writes of the origin and the evolution of Lionel trains from their beginning around 1900 through their status at the commencement of the 21st century, including their near death in 1969 and their miraculous resuscitation by the General Mills cereal company in 1970. Don't be alienated by the earlier statement that this is a history book. It is in no way a dry rehashing of facts, dates and dollars such as comprise boring histories. On the contrary, "All Aboard!" is more of a love story, for Hollander is truly in love with his subject, and his excitement in telling us about the Lionel legend carries the reader through the book on wings of delight.
Highly descriptive text leaves us with a wonderful acquaintanceship with Lionel's parent, Joshua Lionel Cohen (who "Americanized" his name to Cowen), shows us the birth of his baby, draws us word pictures of that baby's successes and failures, its grand leaps of inventiveness and its faltering steps of failure in the changing business and economic climate of a century of American enterprise. Along the way, we are presented with copious visual reinforcement (both in color and in black and white) of the story that the text is weaving for us. We see photographs of the movers and shakers of this great company, some of the wondrous trains that they produced, and some of the expert art work that marketed those trains to the boys and fathers (and girls and mothers, too) of 20th century America. That art work, in annual catalogs and in magazine and newspaper advertisements, forged an emotional bond between American youth and the Lionel Corporation that endures today despite changing fortunes and changing ownership. Its effect on our culture has been phenomenal and is clearly addressed in Hollander's book.
I can levy only two criticisms against "All Aboard!" The first is that I sometimes find the page layout annoying in that many sidebars and notes are included to give us insights into Lionel's executives, competitors, and plans. These are valuable and interesting, but they do interrupt the flow of the main text. The reader must either pause to read the sidebars or else ignore them at first and then return to them later. The second criticism is that the final chapter, which is the only "revised and updated" part of the book since its original release in 1981, lacks the intimate, revealing analysis that gives the rest of the book its finesse. The first eight chapters read as though Hollander had been an insider at the Lionel Corporation for its eighty-one years of birth, growth and turmoil, whereas the ninth chapter, which looks at the technological advances in toy trains from 1982 to 2000, is told by an outside observer who is no more privy to corporate thoughts than are the rest of us.
If one has already enjoyed the 1981 edition of "All Aboard!", I cannot recommend purchasing the current edition just to have the new chapter. On the other hand, if one has never seen either edition of "All Aboard!", then, no matter what other books he may have read on Lionel trains, he has missed the most definitive and enjoyable book of all, and I cannot recommend Hollander's book too highly.
Highly recommended reading for toy train enthusiastsReview Date: 2001-01-29
Marvelous book. A starting point for the Lionel HobbyReview Date: 2001-01-02

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A Rhyming AdventureReview Date: 2005-04-21
In this rhyming adventure, a huge thunderstorm hits the Island of Sodor, and hail from the storm creates a crack in the track-bringing the entire Railway to a screeching halt. Thomas was carrying many passengers, but the crack in the track forces them to get off the train. Bertie the Bus eventually comes to the rescue, but a toad in the road requires the passengers to unload. "What will happen to us?" the people ask. Percy, Gordon, and James get stuck behind Thomas, and the Troublesome Trucks refuse to back up. Will the passengers ever get to their destination?
Unlike many Thomas the Tank Engine stories, especially the ones geared to older children, there is no taunting or rudeness among the engines. Everyone cooperates and helps each other (except for the Troublesome Trucks!).
A Crack in the Track is a hardcover The Cat in the Hat Beginner Book (a division of Random House, Inc.)
Not written wellReview Date: 2005-03-19
What is we teaching our children?Review Date: 2007-01-05
The story starts with our favorite blue steam engine Thomas boasting about how good trains are, but almost from the beginning of the story we can see chinks in the armor. Henry, the green engine, refuses to run due to technical problems. In his stead, Sir Topham Hatt puts Thomas to work hauling passengers.
With a freak hailstorm coming out of the blue, Thomas is waylaid by two rails supplied by the lowest-bidder breaking from the hail. How both rails broke in the exact same place is worthy of investigation, but no one ever mentions that.
Thomas' driver claims that it is not prudent to go back to the originating station and dumps the passengers off right where the train stopped. Luckily, Bertie the bus just happens to be in the area and is able to rescue the passengers.
You'd think this would be the end of the passengers' plight, but apparently the Island of Sodor has tough animal protection laws because a toad in the road that would normally be squashed flat is treated as some sort of deity by the bus driver. The bus driver stops and surveys the scene and decides that the toad's welfare outweighs the passengers' need to reach their destination and he forces everyone off the bus. It's a mystery why he doesn't simply move the toad off of the road and continue on. Probably a plot device to show that a bus ISN'T as good as a train.
The passengers, tired and luggage-laden, trudge down the road to the next train station where they are presented with a sign that declares that there are no trains running. Sir Topham Hatt obviously didn't anticipate such a situation since there aren't any parallel rails to which other trains could bypass the broken rail. Does the entire rail system shut down any time construction work needs to be done?
While the people were walking to the next train station, bad rail management has screwed up the problem even more. Now instead of only Thomas stuck at the track, Percy, Gordon, and James have been routed to the track location. To make matters worse, James is hauling freight cars which can't go backwards.
"So no trains can move up and no trains can move back. They were stuck where they were at that crack in the track."
Thomas has a brilliant plan. He intends to buy some goodwill by spending a lot of money to hire a helicopter to carry the people to their destination. Harold the helicopter arrives on the scene and whisks the people away. Sir Topham Hatt is happy and sends his thanks to Thomas.
Again, the weather gets bad and workmen who look suspiciously like Mario and Luigi come to replace the broken track in the rain. Despite the cold, they are not provided with jackets or raincoats by the construction company. They persevere and replace the tracks quickly.
Finally, Thomas and the other trains are able to move again. Thomas arrives to pick up the stranded passengers (it's not clear how they got stranded again after Harold had already picked them up) and they are clearly unhappy with him. Thomas then states the moral of the story: A train is only as good as its track. In other words, you can never be better than you are.
I think a moral that told children that they can be whatever they want to be would be more appropriate and mark the book down on that alone. A child old enough to read and understand this book will be taught a bad lesson about not growing beyond your limitations.
An excellent bookReview Date: 2004-12-31
Good Early Reader BookReview Date: 2003-10-28

Brings to Life Legends of YesteryearReview Date: 2000-11-13
Broad, but Shallow.Review Date: 2000-04-15
excellent book about railroad ghost legendsReview Date: 2003-12-30
Great ghost stories with photos and picturesReview Date: 2002-07-30
Hear That Lonesome Whistle...Review Date: 2005-12-21
Tony Reevy has obviously done a lot of research in coming up with eighty plus paranormal stories that involve trains. There are haunted tunnels, depots, locomotives, and rail cars and of course ghost trains that roar along their old routes, routes that haven't been run in years and years. Most frequently spotted however are the ghost lights that often move slowly along the track and are usually associated with a specter who is hunting his long lost head. The author seems to have left no stone unturned in looking for these stories and the variety of stories presented is very impressive.
There are two very troubling things about this book however. First of all it is obvious that the author does not take his subject all that seriously and skeptics just do not write good ghost books. The needed passion for the subject is just simply missing when the author is simply relating old tales and makes no effort to talk to recent eyewitnesses to the activity described. The other area where I found this book to be lacking was its depth or rather its lack thereof. Many of the stories related only take up a paragraph or two and hardly any of the stories rate a full two pages. With a little legwork I'm sure that Mr. Reevy could have found numerous old railroaders who would have been glad to relate their personal experiences which would have added greatly to the depth and credibility of this book.
On the positive side there are numerous excellent photos although sometimes the photos have little in common with the stories that they represent. The writing style is pretty good and while there are some well worn stories in this book there are also many stories that I don't imagine have ever appeared in print. I even ran across a tunnel that I have visited but I never knew that it was supposed to be haunted until I read this book.
Overall this is only a fair book as far as the ghost stories go and although no aficionado of ghost stories will want to pass this work up, they shouldn't expect much in the way of details. Train buffs on the other hand will I think find this to be an excellent collection of railroad lore. I grew up in a railroad town and I must admit that the train lover in me found this book to be very appealing.

Not bad, for little train nutsReview Date: 2008-08-24
Train Book for "Thomas The Train" DVDReview Date: 2008-01-12
It is good to see real trains added to the Thomas models. We have an active track 50 yards from our house. She loves them.
Good Value for the MoneyReview Date: 2000-08-21
Informative and Easy to UnderstandReview Date: 2000-08-29
Really cute book for a good price!Review Date: 2006-02-28

Used price: $3.85

Yearning to be on the Orient ExpressReview Date: 2000-09-01
Paranormal Detective Aboard Legendary TrainReview Date: 2001-10-15
needs workReview Date: 2001-05-18
Interesting Characters + Tense Intrigue = Great MysteryReview Date: 2000-03-24
Highly RecommendedReview Date: 2000-02-05
In 1914, Europe is a powder keg about to explode into war. Riding the Orient Express is two English couriers, a German General, Mata Hari, an industrial spy, the heir to the Romanian monarchy, and Agatha Christie. Two people are murdered and it remains up to John to insure that no one else die and the guilty party is caught.
THE CASE OF COMPARTMENT 7 is an entertaining mystery that has the bonus of having Agatha Christie riding the rails. The real persona maintains their known personalities even as they are fully blended into the story line. The action plays against a volatile continent on the verge of World War I. Though somewhat tongue in cheek, Sam McCarver provides an exciting who-done-it that will give much enjoyment to historical mystery fans.
Related Subjects: History Miniature Organizations
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