Railways' Strangest Tales
By (Author) Tom Quinn
HarperCollins Publishers
Portico
8th November 2017
7th September 2017
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Trivia and quiz questions
385
Paperback
256
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 19mm
260g
A fascinating collection of bizarre but true stories from nearly 200 years of railway history.
Right from the very start, when George Stephensons famous Rocket knocked over and killed a government minister at the opening of the Liverpool to Manchester line in 1830, the worlds railways have given rise to plenty of intriguing stories. In this fascinating book, revised and updated with a new selection of tales, railway buff Tom Quinn explores the more bizarre side of train travel, featuring weird weather conditions, audacious robberies, hair-raising accidents, vanishing passengers, an infestation of maggots and a mysterious missing mummy.
From the dawn of rail travel, when speeds of 15mph were considered dangerous to health and people mistook engines for fire-breathing demons, through the Victorian heyday of royal trains and seaside specials to todays more prosaic leaves on the line, this whistlestop tour through railways long and storied history is the perfect gift for armchair travellers, history fans and trainspotters.
Word count: 60,000
Tom Quinn is a journalist, juggler, orange peel collector and expert on Victorian fish painters, who spends much of his time travelling round Britain looking for quirky subjects to write about. He has written five titles in the best-selling Strangest series. Tom also writes occasional obituaries for The Times and edits Country Business magazine.