Train: Riding the Rails That Created the Modern World--From the Trans-Siberian to the Southwest Chief

Train: Riding the Rails That Created the Modern World--From the Trans-Siberian to the Southwest Chief

by TomZoellner (Author)

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 346
Publisher: Penguin USA
Published: 30 Jan 2014

ISBN 10: 0670025283
ISBN 13: 9780670025282

Media Reviews
Tom Zoellner's writing is never less than engaging; in Train he has made himself a veritable Walt Whitman of rail travel. It's a great read.
--Richard Rhodes, Pulitzer prize-winning author of The Making of the Atomic Bomb

Train is such a pleasure to read, elegant, deeply informed and smart, full of knowledge-bearing sentences, and prose so companionable and rich in insight that it is as if its author were at your shoulder, taking you along with him. What an enjoyable journey. I will never hear the far off moan of a train in the night without thinking of it, and I know of no higher praise one can give a book. Tom Zoellner is quickly making himself a reputation as a man of wide and eclectic interests, and oh, my! Can he write!
--Richard Bausch
Praise for Train:

Tom Zoellner's writing is never less than engaging; in Train he has made himself a veritable Walt Whitman of rail travel. It's a great read. --Richard Rhodes, Pulitzer prize-winning author of The Making of the Atomic Bomb
Train is such a pleasure to read, elegant, deeply informed and smart, full of knowledge-bearing sentences, and prose so companionable and rich in insight that it is as if its author were at your shoulder, taking you along with him. What an enjoyable journey. I will never hear the far off moan of a train in the night without thinking of it, and I know of no higher praise one can give a book. Tom Zoellner is quickly making himself a reputation as a man of wide and eclectic interests, and oh, my! Can he write! --Richard Bausch, author of Peace

Entirely terrific....Zoellner gives us an intimate look at some of the innumerable ways in whcih trains have altered the world in which we live. --Jonathan Yardley, The Washington Post

An absorbing and lively reflection on an enduring marvel of modern industrial technology. -- Booklist

Train makes for fascinating reading....The author's easy, breezy style will keep readers chugging along. -- The St. Louis Post-Dispatch

Zoellner illustrates how the modern era was ushered in and strapped in place by railroads, and how trains--the reality and the idea--continue to shape the world as we understand it.... Train is by turns lyrical, powerful, romantic, transporting, and rich. -- Phoenix New Times

[Train], rich with history and local color, is a mesmerizing read for anyone interested in the impact of trains on the environment, politics, economics, and daily life around the world today. -- Library Journal

Enchanting and informative. -- New York Post

[ Train ] is an absorbing round-the-world journey. -- BookPage

Praise for Train:
Tom Zoellner's writing is never less than engaging; in Train he has made himself a veritable Walt Whitman of rail travel. It's a great read. --Richard Rhodes, Pulitzer prize-winning author of The Making of the Atomic Bomb Train is such a pleasure to read, elegant, deeply informed and smart, full of knowledge-bearing sentences, and prose so companionable and rich in insight that it is as if its author were at your shoulder, taking you along with him. What an enjoyable journey. I will never hear the far off moan of a train in the night without thinking of it, and I know of no higher praise one can give a book. Tom Zoellner is quickly making himself a reputation as a man of wide and eclectic interests, and oh, my! Can he write! --Richard Bausch, author of Peace
Spirited and bighearted...Zoellner enlightens us about an industry that's hiding in plain sight. -- San Francisco Chronicle
Highly entertaining, lucid and perceptive....It's a train lover's celebration of the great epic story of rail travel itself. -- Los Angeles Times
This is one of those all-too-rare books that have so much to them -- The Washington Times
[ Train ] is a gracefully written, densely detailed meditation of trains--past, present and future....[P]art travelogue, as he rides seven train that shaped the modern world; part personal memoir, as he describes the people he met along the way; and part history of trains, from their origin to their impact on societies around the world and their vital role in the fast-forward 21st century. -- LA Weekly
An absorbing and lively reflection on an enduring marvel of modern industrial technology. -- Booklist
Train makes for fascinating reading....The author's easy, breezy style will keep readers chugging along. -- The St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Zoellner illustrates how the modern era was ushered in and strapped in place by railroads, and how trains--the realit
Praise for Train:
Tom Zoellner's writing is never less than engaging; in Train he has made himself a veritable Walt Whitman of rail travel. It's a great read. --Richard Rhodes, Pulitzer prize-winning author of The Making of the Atomic Bomb Train is such a pleasure to read, elegant, deeply informed and smart, full of knowledge-bearing sentences, and prose so companionable and rich in insight that it is as if its author were at your shoulder, taking you along with him. What an enjoyable journey. I will never hear the far off moan of a train in the night without thinking of it, and I know of no higher praise one can give a book. Tom Zoellner is quickly making himself a reputation as a man of wide and eclectic interests, and oh, my! Can he write! --Richard Bausch, author of Peace
Spirited and bighearted...Zoellner enlightens us about an industry that's hiding in plain sight. -- San Francisco Chronicle
Highly entertaining, lucid and perceptive....It's a train lover's celebration of the great epic story of rail travel itself. -- Los Angeles Times
This is one of those all-too-rare books that have so much to them -- The Washington Times
[ Train ] is a gracefully written, densely detailed meditation of trains--past, present and future....[P]art travelogue, as he rides seven train that shaped the modern world; part personal memoir, as he describes the people he met along the way; and part history of trains, from their origin to their impact on societies around the world and their vital role in the fast-forward 21st century. -- LA Weekly
An absorbing and lively reflection on an enduring marvel of modern industrial technology. -- Booklist
Train makes for fascinating reading....The author's easy, breezy style will keep readers chugging along. -- The St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Zoellner illustrates how the modern era was ushered in and strapped in place by railroads, and how trains--the reality and the idea--continue to shape the world as we understand it.... Train is by turns lyrical, powerful, romantic, transporting, and rich. -- Phoenix New Times
[Train], rich with history and local color, is a mesmerizing read for anyone interested in the impact of trains on the environment, politics, economics, and daily life around the world today. -- Library Journal
Enchanting and informative. -- New York Post
[ Train ] is an absorbing round-the-world journey. -- BookPage
Praise for Train:
Tom Zoellner's writing is never less than engaging; inTrainhe has made himself a veritable Walt Whitman of rail travel. It's a great read. Richard Rhodes, Pulitzer prize-winning author of The Making of the Atomic Bomb Trainis such a pleasure to read, elegant, deeply informed and smart, full of knowledge-bearing sentences, and prose so companionable and rich in insight that it is as if its author were at your shoulder, taking you along with him. What an enjoyable journey. I will never hear the far off moan of a train in the night without thinking of it, and I know of no higher praise one can give a book. Tom Zoellner is quickly making himself a reputation as a man of wide and eclectic interests, and oh, my! Can he write! Richard Bausch, author of Peace
Spirited and bighearted...Zoellner enlightens us about an industry that s hiding in plain sight. San Francisco Chronicle
Highly entertaining, lucid and perceptive....It s a train lover s celebration of the great epic story of rail travel itself. Los Angeles Times
This is one of those all-too-rare books that have so much to them The Washington Times
[ Train ] is a gracefully written, densely detailed meditation of trains past, present and future....[P]art travelogue, as he rides seven train that shaped the modern world; part personal memoir, as he describes the people he met along the way; and part history of trains, from their origin to their impact on societies around the world and their vital role in the fast-forward 21st century. LA Weekly
An absorbing and lively reflection on an enduring marvel of modern industrial technology. Booklist
Train makes for fascinating reading .The author s easy, breezy style will keep readers chugging along. The St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Zoellner illustrates how the modern era was ushered in and strapped in place by railroads, and how trains the reality and the idea continue to shape the world as we understand it . Train is by turns lyrical, powerful, romantic, transporting, and rich. Phoenix New Times
[Train], rich with history and local color, is a mesmerizing read for anyone interested in the impact of trains on the environment, politics, economics, and daily life around the world today. Library Journal
Enchanting and informative. New York Post
[ Train ] is an absorbing round-the-world journey. BookPage
Author Bio
Tom Zoellner is the author of four previous nonfiction books, including Uranium, winner of the 2011 American Institute of Physics Science Writing Award. He is an Associate Professor at Chapman University and lives in downtown Los Angeles.