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Lionel: America's Favorite Toy Trains
 
 
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Lionel: America's Favorite Toy Trains [Hardcover]

Gerry & Janet Souter (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Book Description

October 22, 2000
In December 1900, a young inventor named Joshua Lionel Cowen devised a battery-powered train intended to help Manhattan toy-shop owners dress up their window displays. When the shops' customers began ordering the trains for themselves, Cowen launched Lionel Manufacturing Company. Beginning with those turn-of-the-century "cigar boxes on wheels," this colorful large-format history follows the world's most famous toy trains as they survive the Great Depression, bask in the height of their popularity in the 1950s and 1960s, weather several changes of ownership in the 1970s and 1980s, and celebrate their 100th anniversary at the end of the 1990s. The trains are richly illustrated with specially commissioned color studio photography, archival black-and-white images, and classic print ads. Also discussed are the business and marketing decisions, electrical innovations, and accessories upon which Lionel built its following. A definitive history for Lionel enthusiasts, railfans, and nostalgia buffs.


Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Gerry Souter learned about trains at his grandfather’s knee in the New York Central roundhouse at Buffalo, New York, and sprawled next to his own Lionel trains beginning at age eight. He met Janet, his wife, in a darkroom at the School of the Chicago Art Institute. Their cameras have visited many Lionel layouts bringing creative illustration to their words. The Souters currently live in Arlington, Illinois. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 160 pages
  • Publisher: MBI (October 22, 2000)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0760305056
  • ISBN-13: 978-0760305058
  • Product Dimensions: 10.3 x 10.2 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2.5 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,626,353 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Merchant seaman, guard & detective agency officer, artist, international photojournalist, film maker, video and television producer, director and writer, mark some of the career paths of author, Gerry Souter during a long life of world travel and adventures. Amazon lists 31 of 45 of his titles with mainstream publishing houses since 1997. His new fiction work evolves from his love of history, romance and bold characters drawn from his own experiences. His enjoyment of shooting sports, journalism and travel over past decades gives the ring of truth to his writing.

 

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67 of 68 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Favorite Book about "America's Favorite Toy Trains"?, November 16, 2000
By 
WILLIAM H FULLER (SPEARFISH, SD USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
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This review is from: Lionel: America's Favorite Toy Trains (Hardcover)
The fresh, exuberant expression of the Souters' writing continues throughout the book as a look at a paragraph from Chapter 7 attests: "Lionel has survived competition, inflation, two world wars, the Great Depression, financial scandal, receivership, rampant nepotism, material shortages, off-shore production experiments, dubious corporate acquisitions, management blunders, marketing blunders, the decline of the railroads, Roy Cohn as CEO, loss of its distribution network, loss of its primary customer base, Sputnik, acquisition by a cereal company, spin-off to a toy company, purchase by a millionaire hobbyist, and the computer chip revolution. Today, the name Lionel still means `electric train'."

Spicing the book further are enticing glimpses at the competition that Lionel often felt nipping at its heels. Here and there throughout the book, sidebars pop up to give views of Carlisle & Finch, Ives, Hafner, American Flyer, Dorfan, Marx, and today's competing brands. Each of these peeks at the "other brand" relates that manufacturer's production to the fortunes of Lionel and helps the reader understand Lionel's response to the threat.

The book does have some shortcomings. It really could have been proofread more closely. A photo caption describing the introduction of the operating cattle car states that it arrived in 1948 but goes on to say that it was pricey for 1947. If this weren't confusing enough, the typesetter mistook the year for the price, and the caption actually states that the car "was pricey for $1,947 but sold well." And we thought that today's prices were high!

Another gaffe comes when OSHA, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, is twice misnamed the Occupational Safety Hazard Administration. Sharp-eyed readers will also catch other errors such as an occasional misspelled or repeated word. These are not often frequent or blatant enough to detract greatly from the enjoyment that the book offers, but they do suggest an inferior proofreading effort.

Perhaps some readers will be willing to overlook the affronts upon the language from uncorrected typographical errors; however, they may be less willing to overlook factual errors in the history and description of Lionel's products. During the discussion of Lionel's brief post-war venture into HO scale trains, the Souters state that "Lionel came out with a strange three-rail HO gauge track that was anathema to its primary hobbyist market." The fact is that Lionel never "came out with" any such track during the Post War or any other era. In the late Pre War Period, the company did catalog and sell both two and three-rail track in OO gauge for a brief time. American OO gauge track is wider than HO and is not compatible with it. The book is confusing not only two different track gauges but also two different time periods.

Discussion of Lionel's fortunes in 1959 includes a description of the No. 3435 Aquarium Car, part of which reads, "Inside, a strip of 35mm clear film with fish painted on it moves past the windows when the activation button is pressed as the car passes over the magnetic track section." The authors must be terribly impressed with the capabilities of Lionel's remote control track section with its electromagnet to ascribe to it the capability of activating the car's vibrating motor! In reality, the car is equipped with an off-on lever to start and stop the motor. With the lever in the "on" position, the motor moves the film strip continuously and with total disregard as to whether or not a remote control section of track is even installed on the layout.

While these examples reveal some of the questionable historical research and knowledge of the authors, they are neither so severe nor so numerous as to sentence the book without parole. There is much that is very good about it: sharp, large photographs of prototypes and their O gauge models; a text that is replete with wonderful turns of phrase that make it a joy to read; an honest willingness to tell all; and the fact that the discussion extends to Lionel's current ownership. On the other hand, occasional textual errors, some factual discrepancies, and the absence of any citations or bibliographies identifying sources limit the extent to which the reader can trust the material.

Is the Souters' book worth its cover price? Probably. After all, who can quibble with the accuracy of these observations from the concluding chapter:

"Today's toy train market is driven by an aging population of nostalgia-loving adults who collect and run joyful remembrances of their youth.

"Where Lionel will find itself in 2001 and the years to come is a guessing game, but whoever is making the decisions, whoever is designing the products and marketing them has one supreme advantage over all the competition. They have the name that has come to symbolize durability, value, and imagination for 100 years. They have the loyalty of fans around the world. They have Lionel--America's Electric Train."

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great book, June 2, 2010
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I bought this book to get more info on Standard Guage trains - It has lots of pictures and great late lionel company info which is new material for me - It is an easy read.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
The twentieth century and the history of Lionel electric trains began con brio-with a rush of enthusiasm. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
toy train market, tinplate track, toy train manufacturers, freight set, train maker, knuckle coupler, hobby market, operating accessories, train collectors, wheel configuration, milk car, wide gauge, power truck, track section, train business, toy trains, operating cars
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New York, American Flyer, Train Collectors Association Toy Train Museum, Standard Gauge, World War, Joshua Cowen, Louis Marx, New Haven, Union Pacific, Joshua Lionel Cowen, Stan Roy, General Mills, Mike Wolf, Mike Moore, Richard Kughn, Mario Caruso, Pennsylvania Railroad, Electric Express, Lawrence Cowen, Chris Rohlfing, General Electric, Milwaukee Road, New Jersey, Toy Fair, Jim Flynn
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