A richly observed and researched personal history of the bygone age of Britain's railways.
Michael Williams is the best-selling author of 'On the Slow Train' and 'On the Slow Train Again' and 'Steaming to Victory'. He is a journalist, academic and author - writing, blogging and broadcasting on railways, the media and other subjects for many publications, including the Independent, the BBC, the Daily Mail, the Daily Telegraph and the New Statesman, as well as the specialist railway press. He is also a travel writer, having covered the world for a variety of publications. He lives with his family in Camden Town, not far from St Pancras - Britain's most splendid railway station.
This is a wistful and sepulchral affair yet … The Trains Now
Departed is more than just a lamentation for the days of steam and
soot.
*Times Literary Supplement*
In elegant prose Michael Williams takes us on nostalgic journeys,
reminding us - with smuts and smells - of what we have lost.
*Michael Portillo*
Revel in what we've lost and wonder how on earth we ever had it.
It's a perfect book for a leisurely, long rail journey. If the
scenery leaves you uninspired, then read a chapter, refresh your
mind, and gaze once more from your window.
*Rail Magazine*
Reflects a mood of nostalgia for the days of steam… charming
*The Tablet*
A nostalgic thrill for anyone with the least longing for the lost
age of steam.
*Press Association*
Williams is to railway writing what his namesake Portillo is to
railway television
*Rail Magazine*
Chock full with enjoyment – will capture and transport
*Bookbag*
An excellent read, and amongst the most enjoyable and entertaining
railway books of the year...Underlying Williams's prose is a sense
of joy...and real knowledge of his subject.
*Steam World 'Book of the Month'*
Even if you are not particularly interested in railways, you will
find much to enjoy in this book. Williams writes well and engages
you in his passion
*Shropshire Star*
A wonderfully evocative read
*BBC Radio 1 DJ*
From charming rural branch lines to the glamourous Night Ferry, the
accounts in Williams’ new book are sure to give a nostalgic thrill
to anyone with the least longing for the lost age of steam.
Anecdotes detail eccentric lines where crews would stop services to
pick mushrooms, then fry them on the firebox; luxurious carriages
are lovingly detailed, producing a pang in anyone familiar with
drab modern services.
*Aberdeen Press & Journal*
Williams explores old routes and services with an historian's eye
for detail and a novelist's sense of pace. Who can now imagine
having kippers on a commuter train or know that the 'Slow and
Dirty' was the nickname for the old Somerset and Dorset line? Well
written, with a wealth of detail for the railway buff.
*The Tablet*
”Dreamlike” is the word for many of Williams’s skillful
evocations
*Spectator*
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