Catch a Ride on the Reading Train
Last Saturday was National Train Day. I'll celebrate this morning by boarding Amtrak's Empire Service and flowing south from Albany to New York City on steel rails in tandem with the Hudson River. More than two hours of spectacular water and mountain scenery will be on display before we burrow into the subterranean depths of Penn Station.
If I had a choice of NYC destinations, I'd opt for Grand Central, of course. The cathedral of rail travel celebrates its centennial this year and a number of books have been released tracing its history, including Grand Central: How a Train Station Transformed America by Sam Roberts and Grand Central Terminal: 100 Years of a New York Landmark by Anthony W. Robins.
I love riding trains, reading on trains and even reading stories--fiction as well as nonfiction--in which trains play a significant role. My current rail-reading schedule includes Alexander McCall Smith's Trains and Lovers (June 11 release) and The Last Train to Zona Verde by Paul Theroux, whose work I started boarding long ago with The Great Railway Bazaar and The Old Patagonian Express.
Trains may well be part of our DNA. Despite being born into an automobile-mad culture, kids are still obsessed with books like The Little Engine that Could, Thomas the Tank Engine or The Polar Express. And you don't need me to tell you the impact Platform 9 3/4 at King's Cross Station has had upon thousands of muggles who dreamed of catching a life-changing ride on the Hogwarts Express.
As readers, we're always boarding book-trains to somewhere. Among my many favorites are Patricia Highsmith's Strangers on a Train, Graham Greene's Stamboul Train, Alan Furst's The Spies of Warsaw and Travels in Siberia by Ian Frazier. I'm sure you have your own. So here's wishing you a belated Happy Train Day. Catch a bookish train soon. --Robert Gray, contributing editor, Shelf Awareness



