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Trustee From the Toolroom Hardcover – January 1, 1960
Purchase options and add-ons
- Print length311 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherWILLIAM MORROW & COMPANY INC
- Publication dateJanuary 1, 1960
- ISBN-109997408462
- ISBN-13978-9997408464
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Product details
- Publisher : WILLIAM MORROW & COMPANY INC (January 1, 1960)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 311 pages
- ISBN-10 : 9997408462
- ISBN-13 : 978-9997408464
- Item Weight : 1.12 pounds
- Best Sellers Rank: #2,546,843 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #101,648 in Literary Fiction (Books)
- #132,478 in Action & Adventure Fiction (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Nevil Shute Norway was born in 1899 in Ealing, London. He studied Engineering Science at Balliol College, Oxford. Following his childhood passion, he entered the fledgling aircraft industry as an aeronautical engineer working to develop airships and, later, airplanes. In his spare time he began writing and he published his first novel, Marazan, in 1926, using the name Nevil Shute to protect his engineering career. In 1931 he married Frances Mary Heaton and they had two daughters. During the Second World War he joined the Royal Navy Volunteer Reserve where he worked on developing secret weapons. After the war he continued to write and settled in Australia where he lived until his death in 1960. His most celebrated novels include Pied Piper (1942), A Town Like Alice (1950), and On the Beach (1957).
Photo by w:Australian Women's Weekly [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons.
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Customer reviews
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To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the story enjoyable and memorable. They appreciate the delightful characters and the emphasis on the protagonist's intellect. The book is described as a fun, engaging read with wonderful technical details. Readers praise the author's storytelling style as spellbinding and lovely. Overall, they describe the story as heartwarming and interesting.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers enjoy the story. They find it enjoyable, memorable, and satisfying. The book has a simple yet captivating tale with great characters and plot. Readers praise the author as one of the best they have read.
"...This is a thoroughly satisfying and utterly charming story...." Read more
"...Lots of detail, easy to visualize great characters and plot. It can be a bit on the technical side, but I enjoyed it overall." Read more
"One of the best authors I have read! His language and narration are so lucid and engaging that you are transported to the scene magically...." Read more
"...Well without spoiling too much of this awesome book, “something” happens and Keith has quite an adventure himself trying to secure a future for his..." Read more
Customers enjoy the book. They find it an engaging and lighthearted read with appealing characters and a fun plot. The information is interesting and rendered quite well by the author's passion. It's a great adventure that can be enjoyed by anyone.
"...Spending time with the book, letting the paragraphs slide by, was pure joy, every minute of it. I just didn't want it to end...." Read more
"...His language and narration are so lucid and engaging that you are transported to the scene magically...." Read more
"...the Kindle version and I have to say I believe it made the book so much more enjoyable...." Read more
"...He is perfectly, supremely happy.’’..." Read more
Customers enjoy the book's character development. They find the characters honest, delightful, and easy to visualize. The author places an emphasis on the protagonist's intellect and global influence. They appreciate the respect for different styles and personalities.
"...It is charming because the characters are such good people; the kind you'd feel privileged to have as friends...." Read more
"...Shute is an excellent story-teller. All the main characters are very likeable and honorable. Everyone seems to do the right thing all the time...." Read more
"One of my favorites from this author. Lots of detail, easy to visualize great characters and plot...." Read more
"...the way he wins hearts and minds with his technical genius, probity of character and endearing nature...." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's technical details. They find the characters and plot easy to visualize. Readers praise the author's vast knowledge of engineering and his ability to describe intricate details of sailing, machining, aviation, and science. The story is described as charming by those with a technical background.
"...But they are also realistic; the author's career was immersed in the engineering and entrepreneurial milieu, and understands these folks in detail...." Read more
"...It simply tells the story, in great detail, of how Keith lives and eventually embarks on an exotic trip across half the globe on a very unlikely..." Read more
"One of my favorites from this author. Lots of detail, easy to visualize great characters and plot...." Read more
"Wow! What a great story! There are so many details in this book, it’s almost as intricate as the small engines that the main character, Keith..." Read more
Customers enjoy the book's storytelling. They find it engaging, with a simple tale about an unassuming man who makes good. The book touches their hearts and is a good tale of personal growth and commitment. Readers describe it as memorable and say the book is about an unassuming middle-aged technician who has to undertake an arduous voyage across the world.
"...It simply tells the story, in great detail, of how Keith lives and eventually embarks on an exotic trip across half the globe on a very unlikely..." Read more
"...This is the story of an unassuming middle-aged technician who has to undertake an arduous voyage across the Atlantic ocean to foreign shores due to..." Read more
"...any details given will hold you spellbound by the authors ability to inform while entertaining...." Read more
"...I first read this about fifty years ago, as a youth. The story touched my heart. Never forgot...." Read more
Customers enjoy the heartwarming story. They find it charming and interesting with unexpected plot twists. The book is described as a light-hearted read with interesting facts. Overall, customers describe it as a feel-good story with heartwarming endings.
"...called the “maker subculture”, and that these people are resourceful, creative, willing to bend the rules to get things done and help one another,..." Read more
"...yet it does not seem to be archaic at all.....it has a wonderful blend of modern thinking and old world charm...." Read more
"...It is an inspiring story of familial love, death, caring, commitment and friendship. It will not disappoint!" Read more
"...True, real science, real sense of engineering-ability and honesty and simplicity might be just the exact reasons we are not making it in life --..." Read more
Customers find the book a worthwhile read. They appreciate the story's portrayal of worthy human values and honorable characters. The book is described as inspiring, with a riveting tale of courage, duty, and devotion. Readers mention that it renews their faith in humanity.
"...All the main characters are very likeable and honorable. Everyone seems to do the right thing all the time...." Read more
"...Integrity, compassion, trust, humility, sincerity, self-sacrifice, contrasts with - arrogance, selfishness, superficial materialism...." Read more
"...an inspiring story of familial love, death, caring, commitment and friendship. It will not disappoint!" Read more
"...He proves to be humble man of great determination and ability, who sets out on a quest to fulfill a promise made to his lost sister to "look after"..." Read more
Customers enjoy the book's pacing. They find the story engaging and riveting, with a steady conviction and bravery. The book keeps them turning the pages to find out what happens next. Readers describe it as one of the greatest books by Nevil Shute.
"...Integrity, compassion, trust, humility, sincerity, self-sacrifice, contrasts with - arrogance, selfishness, superficial materialism...." Read more
"...and has many surprising plot developments that kept me up late happily turning pages...." Read more
"...trust, excellence, devotion to what is right, willingness to go to extremes to do what is promised and it is told in a sometimes hilarious way..." Read more
"...but more unexpected and satisfying The story is wonderful and affirming; however, the only character which I took away a real sense of was the..." Read more
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on November 18, 2019Keith Stewart is an unexceptional man. “[Y]ou may see a little man get in at West Ealing, dressed in a shabby raincoat over a blue suit. He is one of hundreds of thousands like him in industrial England, pale-faced, running to fat a little, rather hard up. His hands show evidence of manual work, his eyes and forehead evidence of intellect.” He earns his living by making mechanical models and writing articles about them which are published, with directions, in the London weekly Miniature Mechanic. His modest income from the magazine has allowed him to give up his toolroom job at an aircraft subcontractor. Along with the income his wife Katie earns from her job in a shop, they make ends meet and are paying down the mortgage on their house, half of which they rent out.
Keith's sister Jo married well. Her husband, John Dermott, is a retired naval officer and nephew of Lord Dungannon, with an independent income from the family fortune. Like many people in postwar Britain, the Dermotts have begun to chafe under the ceaseless austerity, grey collectivism, and shrinking freedom of what was once the vanguard of civilisation and have decided to emigrate to the west coast of Canada, to live the rest of their lives in freedom. They've decided to make their journey an adventure, making the voyage from Britain to Vancouver through the Panama Canal in their modest but oceangoing sailboat Shearwater. Keith and Katie agree to look after their young daughter Janice, whose parents don't want to take out of school and who might not tolerate a long ocean voyage well.
Tragedy befalls the Dermotts, as they are shipwrecked and drowned in a tropical storm in the Pacific. Keith and Katie have agreed to become Janice's trustees in such an event and, consulting the Dermotts' solicitor, are astonished to learn that their fortune, assumed substantial, has almost entirely vanished. While they can get along and support Janice, she'll not be able to receive the education they assumed her parents intended her to have.
Given the confiscatory capital controls in effect at the time, Keith has an idea what may have happened to the Dermott fortune. “And he was the trustee.” Keith Stewart, who had never set foot outside of England, and can barely afford a modest holiday, suddenly finds himself faced with figuring out how to travel to the other side of the world, to a location that isn't even on his map, and undertake a difficult and risky mission.
Keith discovers that while nobody would recognise him on the street or think him out of the ordinary, his writing for Miniature Mechanic has made him a celebrity in what, more than half a century later, would be called the “maker subculture”, and that these people are resourceful, creative, willing to bend the rules to get things done and help one another, and some dispose of substantial wealth. By a chain of connections which might have seemed implausible at the outset but is the kind of thing which happens all of the time in the real world, Keith Stewart, modelmaker and scribbler, sets out on an epic adventure.
This is a thoroughly satisfying and utterly charming story. It is charming because the characters are such good people; the kind you'd feel privileged to have as friends. But they are also realistic; the author's career was immersed in the engineering and entrepreneurial milieu, and understands these folks in detail. This is a world, devoid of much of what we consider to be modern, you'll find yourself admiring; it is a joy to visit it. The last two paragraphs will make you shiver.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 28, 2014Trustee from the Toolroom by Nevil Shute is the most delightful novel I have read in a very long time. Spending time with the book, letting the paragraphs slide by, was pure joy, every minute of it. I just didn't want it to end.
Shute died in 1960 and the book was published posthumously later that year. I must admit I had never read another Shute book, never heard of the author and I would certainly not have come across this one had it not been for a recommendation by a friend and colleague.
Trustee from the Toolroom is the story of Keith Stewart, a frumpy British engineer and journalist who has carved out a meager business building model engineering projects and writing about them in a niche magazine called the Miniature Mechanic. He loves what he does, and he and his wife live childless and seemingly content. They have just enough to get by and they are happy with their modest lives.
Keith's wife's sister Jo is married to a retired British naval officer. The two have one young daughter. They decide to sail in their own boat from England to the Pacific, with the goal of establishing themselves in Vancouver. During the journey, they leave their daughter with the Stewarts. They intend to have her flown over after they arrive in Vancouver some five months later.
A hurricane in the middle of the South Pacific changes everything, and Keith faces the conflicts of deciding to maintain his small and safe existence in an English village, or risk everything to recover the nest egg his in-laws have put aside for their daughter, making him the trustee. In the end, Keith chooses the path of adventure and courage.
This book is a novel without any villain or even any intense conflict. It simply tells the story, in great detail, of how Keith lives and eventually embarks on an exotic trip across half the globe on a very unlikely mission. We think we know the eventual outcome but the suspense comes from wanting to know how he accomplishes it, step by step.
Shute is an excellent story-teller. All the main characters are very likeable and honorable. Everyone seems to do the right thing all the time. It's almost like a fairy tale, except there is no bad guy. The challenges in the story are simply life's obstacles and accidental misfortunes.
A story like that just makes you feel good reading it, and everyone should have that experience once in a while.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 17, 2023One of my favorites from this author. Lots of detail, easy to visualize great characters and plot. It can be a bit on the technical side, but I enjoyed it overall.
- Reviewed in the United States on November 27, 2014One of the best authors I have read! His language and narration are so lucid and engaging that you are transported to the scene magically. It is incredible that that this writer was born in the 1890s and most of his writing is of 1920 to 1960 vintage and yet it does not seem to be archaic at all.....it has a wonderful blend of modern thinking and old world charm.
This is the story of an unassuming middle-aged technician who has to undertake an arduous voyage across the Atlantic ocean to foreign shores due to a family exigency, and all along the way he wins hearts and minds with his technical genius, probity of character and endearing nature. He also does not lose any opportunity to engage his scientific temperament and learn new things and skills to enlarge the scope of his mission.
This forward thinking author has surely inspired the likes of Alistair Maclean, Desmond Bagley and others of the same genre since his work predates theirs.
This was my first Nevil Shute book and surely not the last! The author is highly recommended to those who have a penchant for technical or engineering concepts woven into an engaging storyline of human endeavour.
Top reviews from other countries
Geoffrey LockeReviewed in France on December 22, 20245.0 out of 5 stars Gripping
Having read a town like Alice , I embarked on this with trepidation.
I was soon gripped and devouring every chapter.
A delight, must read
Kindle CustomerReviewed in the United Kingdom on December 14, 20245.0 out of 5 stars Sensitively written
I was captivated by the detail of the models by an Englishman who lived a modest life and made a fantastic voyage.
I thought Nevil Shute had written 'A Town Like Alice' and 'The Far Country' my favourite books of all time and now I find there is a Library. I wasn't so keen on Longitude and Latitude, but the finest storytelling drew me in
I will recommend it to a former BA Flight Engineer, responsible for planes leaving or not. An intelligent man.
Valerie M SchneiderReviewed in Mexico on September 27, 20213.0 out of 5 stars Trustee of the Toolroom
Nevil Shute writes for every man. He eloquently demonstrates the value of being an 'average joe' and affirms for his readers the acceptability of being a responsible citizen. Thank you Mr. Shute.
Akbar RaheemReviewed in India on May 11, 20215.0 out of 5 stars Vintage
I got it for MRP: 399 (No discount).
Story: So far, so good 👍
I got it for MRP: 399 (No discount).5.0 out of 5 stars
Akbar RaheemVintage
Reviewed in India on May 11, 2021
Story: So far, so good 👍
Images in this review
HillTreeReviewed in Australia on July 28, 20235.0 out of 5 stars Magical Read
A "Boys Own Adventure" in the old school way.
I haven't read this book since it was a compulsory read in high school when I enjoyed it so much.
The attention to sailing and flying details is remarkable.
Wonderful to experience the tale and how technically limited things were back in the late fifty's when lots of things were done by people rather than machine.
And what a remarkable adventure, something I would never attempt myself even today with all the transport and tech options.
Again, a remarkable book with the old way of speaking and attitudes of the characters.
Do have a read you won't be disappointed!!!!



