From the
Oxford Times:
The Great Western Railway
Stroud-based Amberley Publishing has recently released two new books about the Great Western Railway.
The first, The Great Western Railway: Volume One Paddington to Bristol (^16.99) by local authors Stanley C Jenkins and Martin Loader is an interesting collection of ^then and now^ photographs with accompanying explanations and a good introduction, for that 118 mile straight-line stretch of the GWR▸ .
There is no index, but then the book just gets a green light at Paddington and ends with a red at Bristol Temple Meads, taking each station and line feature in turn.
The photos are fairly typically clich^d, so this book will be of interest mainly to rail enthusiasts, who may judge it a worthwhile addition to the huge number of books about the GWR.
Amberley^s second book is Bradshaw^s Guide To Brunel^s Railways, Volume 3: The Minor Lines (^14.99), revitalised by ^Brunel expert^ John Christopher, the third in a series of books based on Bradshaw^s Descriptive Railway Hand-Book of Great Britain and Ireland, originally published in 1863 and made famous again on TV▸ by Michael Portillo. This volume focuses on the minor lines in the network, roughly scanning east to west, starting with the Slough to Windsor branch, then Didcot to Oxford, the ^Old Worse and Worse^ (the Oxford, Worcester and Wolverhampton railway), and lines in Wiltshire and Somerset, before some sections in South Wales. There is a map from the 1920s showing the reader all the lines. Bradshaw describes points of interest and some history along each line.
Didcot gets hardly a mention, as it was only a junction in Bradshaw^s time, but John Christopher has restored present-day balance with three pages of well-annotated photos, mainly about Didcot Railway Centre.
Oxford (population 27,560) gets a thorough treatment, including civic buildings, churches and colleges. The quaint ^objects of notice near Oxford^ inevitably includes Blenheim. The OWW▸ , now our Cotswold Line, starts with Adlestrop, which we all remember, and runs through stations to Wolverhampton via Worcester, famous for Elgar and Lea and Perrins^ sauce.
It is fascinating to see how places have changed, as the accompanying photos are a mixture of the ancient (mostly contributed by Stanley C Jenkins for the OWW) and the modern.
Fans of Portillo^s programme will find this second book particularly enjoyable.