(Hardcover - 1 ED)
Text, color photographs, and maps take the reader on multi-day scenic adventures along eight spectacular routes. Grant (executive producer of the public television programs on which this volume is based) presents the story of the railway's history and how it came to be constructed, as well as details of the trip itinerary. In addition, he introduces dozens of delightful charactersconductors, tour guides, passengers, hotel owners, local indigenous people, and rail company operators. Oversize: 9x11". Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR
From the Gold Rush country of Alaska to the exotic wilderness of Mexico's Copper Canyon, this lively companion volume to the Public Television programs captures all the adventure and drama of North America's finest passenger trains. Great American Rail Journeys is top-notch reading for anyone who has heard the call of the rails.
More Reviews and RecommendationsThe companion book to the hit PBS television series, Great American Rail Journeys is a beautifully photographed tour of North America's most stunning railroad itineraries. From the Rocky Mountains to Mexico's breathtaking Copper Canyon, this extraordinary book includes photographs and maps, plus extensive coverage of the history of each journey.
Great American Rail Journeys takes you on location to eight of North America's most scenic and historically rich landscapes. Each of the rail adventures profiled in this volume -- a counterpart to the highly praised public television programs -- celebrates the beauty, history, and romance of railway travel.
From your first-class seat on this virtual railway coach, you'll view coastlines and canyons, majestic mountains and rushing rivers, Native villages and world-class cities. Along the way you'll meet dozens of delightful characters -- conductors, tour guides, passengers, and others who share their love of the landscape and their passion for riding the rails.
From the Gold Rush country of Alaska to the exotic wilderness of Mexico's Copper Canyon, this lively companion volume to the Public Television programs captures all the adventure and drama of North America's finest passenger trains. Great American Rail Journeys is top-notch reading for anyone who has heard the call of the rails.
John Grant's book about American railways celebrates their proud past and suggests their colorful future, from Alaska's Gold Rush train down to Mexico's Copper Canyon railroad. Dozens of stunning photos summon the sound of train whistles and remind us of the great American countryside that's just on the other side of the window.
Spectacular scenery, fascinating history, and distinctive insight make this breezily written guide a captivating package wrapped up with the romance of rail travel. Read it to plan your next vacation or for pure enjoyment.
Like the public television programs that inspired it, John Grant's Great American Rail Journeys introduces a new generation of adventurers and armchair travelers to the diversity and beauty of the people and landscapes that can be discovered from the seat of a passenger train speeding across the North American continent.
This companion to the PBS program is a fine armchair read for any fascinated by railroads and travel: it takes a cross-country trip behind the scenes of American roads, presenting eight chapters which celebrate multi-day rail journeys. Rail history and scenery alike are presented in colorful, photo-packed chapters.
| Introduction | ix | |
| The Alaska Railroad | 2 | |
| The Adirondack | 26 | |
| The Copper Canyon | 48 | |
| The Rockies by Rail | 72 | |
| The Canadian Rockies | 96 | |
| The Coast Starlight | 118 | |
| The American South by Rail | 142 | |
| Alaska's Gold Rush Train | 166 | |
| Appendix | How to Book Your Own Great American Rail Journey | 191 |
| Index | 193 |
Many people have a special connection with trains, a romantic, almost magical attraction. Often it dates back to some childhood experience or distant memory. Sometimes it is only a vague sensation, but almost always it is a happy feeling. This explains part of the appeal of train travel, but there is so much more.
With train travel, the going is as important as the getting there. The train glides along at a rhythm that allows you to become immersed in the landscape. It provides an opportunity to experience the out of the ordinary, the unexpected. While you won't find something new around every bend in the tracks, there are plenty of surprises and new experiences to be enjoyed when you ride the rails -- like stopping for a grizzly bear to cross the tracks in the Alaskan wilderness, or cruising along the Pacific Ocean on rails that seem to surf the waves, or spending the day glued to the window as the train curves through strange and remote canyons of the Rocky Mountains.
Traveling through the towns and the countryside by train, you get a "behind-the-scenes" look at America. As folklorist Nick Spitzer told us when we filmed the "American South by Rail" television program for PBS, "You're moving at a wonderfully mellow pace across the landscape. You see the backs of yards, you see... fishing camps, you see little dance halls and honky-tonks in the crossroads of towns."
The wide windows of the train offer a remarkable and rare perspective from which to examine areas that are less traveled and occasionally places that can only be seen from the train. In addition to the dramatic vistas, train travelers also can witness wildlife at close proximity. "Today, we saw a golden eagle sitting on a fence post right next to the train," rail lecturer John Borneman reported during the "Rockies by Rail" trip. "Most of these people had never seen a golden eagle before. And we saw a mule deer right along the side of the train. You never know what you're going to see, and it's really exciting."
Most railroads in North America were built for commerce, not for tourism. Leisure travel wasn't even a consideration when railroads like the Chihuahua al Pacifico Railway and the Alaska Railroad were constructed. Today tourism is what keeps many trains running. "Train travel is so much fun because you're not having to worry about driving and being somewhere," says Matthew Wheeler, whose photographs of Via Rail's Skeena train are featured in "The Canadian Rockies" chapter. "This dome is like a traveling village," he says, referring to the train's bright glass-domed cars. "It's just an instantly constructed little place where you meet people from all over the world and they have fascinating stories they tell you." Throughout Great American Rail Journeys you'll meet lots of people like Matthew Wheeler, John Borneman, and Nick Spitzer. They are among dozens of what we call "local storytellers," people who share their enthusiasm and love for trains and for the places we visit along the tracks. On these journeys you'll also meet the delightful tour guides of the Alaska Railroad, the remarkable chefs of the American Orient Express, the friendly Mexican staff of the Sierra Madre Express, and the informative and courteous conductors onboard Amtrak and Via Rail trains. From Great American Rail Journeys, © 2000 by John Grant.
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