Rails Around the World Two Centuries of Trains and Locomotives
by Brian Solomon
Railfans are known for “chasing steam” meaning following, as best possible, along the route of a particular engine or train that is underway. Some fans even travel far from home—even to other lands—to see and experience in person the machines that so fascinate them. It’s unlikely, however, that many travel to as many lands as railfan photographer and author Brian Solomon.
All that travel, coupled with his ability to write, has resulted in this survey of railroading over time—two centuries as the subtitle indicates—in nearly twenty countries on three continents. Oh, and take fine photos, too. As the book’s photo credits show, most of the contemporary images Solomon shot while others of vintage engines were sourced from his personal collection. Best yet, he’s got a good eye and a clear way of communicating, and MBI, his publisher, did a fine job presenting all bound between hardcovers.
The publisher’s page designer deserves recognition for she, Elizabeth Van Itallie by name, used a clever touch emphasizing the international aspect. She placed the flag of the nation in which a particular set of pages is set in the lower outside corner of each page. Occasionally though, it might have been more appropriate for flags of multiple lands to be used. One such instance has Sweden’s flag decorating the pages yet the largest image is that of an American Amtrak Class Rc Electric pulling its consist. So what’s the deal? Brian Solomon explains in his text how Amtrak had done some comparative shopping and found the Swedish designed and built “ASEA Re-4 best suited to its application” so had several “assembled under license by EMD at La Grange, Illinois . . . Initially, Amtrak ordered forty-seven . . . but later bought additional locomotives.”
Another chapter that could (really should!) have seen multiple flags used tells of GM’s B121 diesels for they proved to be so reliable, well-conceived and -built that “they established GM as Ireland’s locomotive supplier for three decades” as they were built in Ireland under license and “colloquially known as ‘Yanks’ which distinguished them from the rest of the largely British-built diesel fleet.”
The book is chock full of these interesting tidbits of global railroading across the ages. Some concern track gauge; which countries used what and how that was handled when a train—or its cargo—was bound for the other side of the border where track was of different gauge—especially in Europe. By the way, those differing gauges were more than the narrow and standard experienced in the US, On the European continent there was narrow, standard, and wide not to mention differing trucks to adapt to differing situations so rather unusual B-B-B and B-B wheel arrangements on C trucks.
Appropriate to mention here, too, Solomon doesn’t expend precious page space explaining terms or basics of railroading. So if a term is unfamiliar, it’s left to the reader to search out defining and understanding.
The images on the pages contain so much detail you dare not merely glance at them but need to pause and study each just as the text contains so much detailed info that one is cautioned to read with care and attention. Solomon provides such an interesting and engaging way to “travel the world” that I arrived at the last page reluctantly. That said, the book has a fine Bibliography grouped by types of literature thus offering readers the opportunity to delve into other aspects as may be of particular interest.
If railroading history intrigues you, this book offers a lot for a very reasonable price. From American 4-4-0s, then 2-8-0s, Shays, and then those great and powerful compounds to whimsically named Doodlebugs and Wind-Splitters to Germany’s Flying Hamburger or the Vladimir Lenin Electrics of (where else?) the Soviet Union, Rails Around the World is a grand tour across time the globe around.
Copyright 2023 Helen V Hutchings, SAH (speedreaders.info)