Top Ten Tuesday: Planes, Trains, and Automobiles!

Today’s TTT is “Planes, Trains, and Automobiles”, which — no pun intended — is definitely in my wheelhouse. As longtime readers here know, transportation is a frequent nonfiction visit of mine, possibly because I come from a family of truckers and military flyboys. Here are some of my favorite transport reads!

But first, a tease!

Spock took a step closer to T’Nalae. “You say that you boarded the Enterprise to learn from me, Specialist. What I have to teach you may not be what you expected to hear … but that is the nature of true learning. I request that you ponder on that until we speak again.”

McCoy shook his head. “Unbelievable. An emotional Vulcan who’s having problems with telepathic humans. Did we cross over into an alternate universe again?

(Star Trek: The Higher Frontier, Christopher L Bennett)

Five book covers featuring trains, trolleys, bicycles, and a transit map

Fares, Please! A Popular History of Trolleys, Horsecars, Streetcars, Buses, Elevateds, and Subways, John Anderson Miller.

The Great Railway Revolution, Christian Wolmar. A history of trains in America.

Driving with the Devil: Southern Moonshine, Detroit Motors, and the Birth of NASCAR. I literally only learned that NASCAR had a prohibition connection from watching Talladega Nights.

Pedal to the Metal: The Work Lives of Truckers, Lawrence Duellet. An ethnography of OTR drivers. Dated but excellent.

Straphanger: Saving Ourselves and our Cities from the Automobile, Taras Grescoe. A study of the transit systems of thirteen cities, some traditionally urban and some auto-oriented, to find out what works and what doesn’t, and to see how technology is making systems run more seamlessly — like using the same card to get train access and rent bicycles at the train station!

In the City of Bikes: The Story of the Amsterdam Cyclist, Pete Jordan. Oh, to live in a city built for humans and joy…

Conquest of the Skies: The Story of Commercial Aviation in America, Carl Solberg. The best general history of plane travel I know of, at least for the U.S.

Romance of the Rails: Why the Trains We Love Aren’t the Transportation We Need, Randal O’Toole. I love trains and trolleys, but O’Toole presented some hard arguments that made me rethink their modern application in the US.

Ninety Percent of Everything, Rose George, a look at the modern maritime shipping industry.

The Box, Marc Levinson. A history of the standarized shipping container and its massive effect on cities and the global economy. Interestingly, the container was designed by a trucker.

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34 Responses to Top Ten Tuesday: Planes, Trains, and Automobiles!

  1. Cyberkitten's avatar Cyberkitten says:

    You always do such a good job of reminding me about the kind of books I’m *not* reading…. Hopefully I can fit in a few transport related books in the ‘near’ future… Mostly trains… But possibly some other stuff too.

  2. Unknown's avatar Anonymous says:

    Straphanger sounds like a good read.

    Lydia

  3. Unknown's avatar Anonymous says:

    Some of the railways history is pretty interesting but I haven’t read a lot of it! Good list this week & thanks for dropping by (OneReadingNurse)

  4. Unknown's avatar Anonymous says:

    Driving with the Devil sounds interesting.

    Here is our <a href=”https://www.longandshortreviews.com/miscellaneous-musings/top-ten-tuesday-boat-books/“>Top Ten Tuesday.</a> 

    Astilbe

  5. Carrie's avatar Carrie says:

    the ones about trains look really interesting! My TTT

  6. These look interesting! I like how literally you took the prompt. Most people just chose road trip books.

  7. shanaqui's avatar shanaqui says:

    Oooh, interesting. Always love an excuse to add more non-fiction to my list, ahaha.

  8. Veros's avatar Veros @ Dark Shelf of Wonders says:

    Straphanger sounds interesting. I don’t drive so my interest in cars is very minimal but pedestrian focused cities are so attractive to me, are any of those discussed in there? In the city of bikes sounds great for the same reason and maybe that’s one I should read!

  9. curlygeek04's avatar curlygeek04 says:

    As a frequent rider of public transit, Straphanger is going on my TBR list. Thanks!

  10. They all sound very interesting, the kind of audiobooks I sometimes listen to at work.

  11. Oh some of these sound so interesting! Especially the trains one. I like trains but in a country like Australia, they are very impractical for long distance travel.

  12. Some great suggestions, Stephen. Like me, you have used different kinds of transport. I just saw one post with only trains and another one with only planes. I like the variety.

    And thanks for visiting my post.
    https://momobookblog.blogspot.com/2024/08/top-ten-tuesday-planes-trains.html

  13. Susan's avatar Susan says:

    THE BOX actually sounds really interesting to me. I love learning about the history and importance of mundane, everyday things that we all take for granted.

    Happy TTT (on a Wednesday)!

    Susan
    http://www.blogginboutbooks.com

  14. The reason that there was no overlap between your post and mine, despite the fact that both of us chose nonfiction, is that you focused on the mode of transportation and I focused on simply traveling from one place to another.

  15. Jaime's avatar Jaime says:

    I love how specific your list is because it’s literally non-fiction books about transportation! What a cool idea 🙂

  16. Annemieke's avatar Annemieke says:

    Oh an interesting list. I think The Great Railway Revolution might be of interest to my husband 🙂

  17. Pingback: My August Reading Wrap-Up – The Book Stop

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