Arizona Rail Passenger Association
Bibliography
The A.R.P.A. recommends the following books. If these are unavailable at
your local library, please ask them to purchase copies. Libraries are always
looking for suggestions... and as rail advocates it is our duty to ensure that
the library stacks include serious railroad books like these. Books we
especially recommend are shown in bold.
America's Passenger Trains
- Mauris L. Emeka,
AMTRAKing: A Guide to Enjoyable Train Travel. Port Orchard,
Washington: Apollo Publishing, 1994. viii + 116pp. Illustrations. $11.95
(softback), ISBN: 0-9640125-0-2. Reviews at
Amazon.com
- Gordon Gill, Amtrak's Long-Distance Service: Can It Be Made Viable?
Dorrance Publishing Company, Pittsburgh, PA, October 1, 1998. Paperback - 184
pages () $14.00. Reviews at
Amazon.com.
- Steven Goddard, Getting There: The Epic
Struggle Between Road and Rail in the American Century.
Harper-Collins, 1994. Reviews at
Amazon.com
- Donald M. Itzkoff, Off the Track, The Decline of the Intercity
Passenger Train in the United States, 1995.
- Jane Holtz Kay, Asphalt Nation: How the Automobile Took Over
America and How We Can Take it Back. New York: Crown, 1997. xii +
418 pp. Illustrations and bibliographical references. $27.50 (cloth), ISBN
0-5175-8702-5. Reviews at
Amazon.com
- Joseph Vranich, Derailed: What
Went Wrong and What to Do About America's Passenger Trains. St.
Martin's Press, 1997. 258 pp, 16 pages b&w photographs. $24.95 (hardcover),
ISBN: 0-312-17182-X. Reviews at
Amazon.com
- Joseph Vranich, Supertrains, Solutions to America's Transportation
Gridlock. St. Martin's Press, New York, 1993; $15.95; 422 pages with
photos throughout, ISBN: 0-312-09468-X. Reviews at
Amazon.com
- Frank Wilner, The Amtrak Story, Simmons-Boardman Books, Inc.,
Omaha, 1995; $26.95.
Light Rail
- Michael Barry, Through The Cities. Dublin, Ireland: Colour
Books, 1991. ISBN: 0-9510696-3-2.
Arizona's Railroads
- David F. Myrick, Railroads of Arizona [three volumes, with a
fourth released in 1998]. Howell-North Books, San Diego, California, 1980.
385.09791 (Library of Congress: HE2771.A6M94; ISBN: 0-8310-7111-7 (v.I))
- Ride A Mile and Smile the While. [A history of the Phoenix
Street Railway Co.]
Rail Stations
The above list is just a start. We
welcome your suggestions.
Reviews
Asphalt Nation by Jane Holtz Kay
From time to time we as rail advocates have the need to write a letter to
the editor of a publication or to a public official with appropriate
documentation to substantiate our opinions.
A book recently released serves this purposes admirably. It is "Asphalt
Nation," by Jane Holtz Kay, published by Crown Press, and available at
most bookstores for around $27 and at many libraries.
It is an exhaustive review well documented of how the demise of public
transportation did much to lower the standards of society as use of the
automobile proliferated, subsidized greatly by the general taxpayer contrary to
prevailing opinion which implies that user taxes cover it all.
She traces the record of the pollution contributions an automobile makes to
the environment from the time it is built to the time it is junked.
Surprisingly, one-third of the pollution occurs with the manufacture of the
automobile before it ever leaves the factory and goes onto the streets.
Much good data for debate in this book. Recommended reading. Dan
Monaghan
Links:
AMTRAKing by Mauris Emeka
Train travel can be a wonderful experience or a trying one, says a veteran
Amtrak train attendant. Mauris Emeka, trainman and author of the book AMTRAKing,
says there are some things a person needs to know to truly enjoy train travel.
"I've drawn on my experiences to tell people how to get the most from
train travel," says Emeka, whose uncle was a Pullman porter. Here are a few
things he says the train traveler needs to know:
- Bring a blanket if you're traveling overnight by coach. These sometimes get
chilly late at night.
- Make use of Amtrak's toll free number, 800/USA-RAIL. Use it to check if the
train is leaving on time. Give it to those who will meet you at your
destination.
- Stay comfortable by doing travelers' stretches. (Several pages of the book
illustrate stretches which can be done while sitting.)
- The train can transport your bicycle, at a cost less than you think --
$5.00 as of this writing.
- When you book a room with a sleeping berth, meals in the dining car are
included.
- Certain passengers can reserve lower level seating on Superliner cars.
Elderly and mobility impaired passengers often find this helpful.
- If your destination is to a small town, it may be an unmanned station. If
it is, don't check your luggage to that station. Instead, carry it on-board with
you. Nothing is more disappointing than arriving at your destination without
your luggage.
- To save money on certain types of fares, you must ask the agent about
Amtrak's various discounted fare plans.
This book, full of tips for the traveler, includes a chapter with answers
to questions that passengers ask.
AMTRAKing (136 pages) is available from Apollo Publishing Co., P.O. Box
1397, Port Orchard, WA 98366, or call 800/308-5273.
Derailed by Joseph Vranich
Derailed:
What Went Wrong and What to Do About America's Passenger Trains
Critical
Review: by Dan Monaghan
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