A book review:
The invoice
from Medlar Press is dated 27th September 2011, the book A Train to Catch, today the 6th
January 2012!
I requested of The Boss that perhaps we had
times in the day when the distractions of Radio 4 Extra were given a rest, and
to stop me having an excuse of not reading my books.
An excuse that has
festered, in my head only, for considerable
time, when my reading has been reduced to holidays and very early
mornings when the Barbel Fisher was close to the point of going to the printer
and my sleepless nights of worrying if I had enough content.
So at
around 11am the digital radio on the TV was switched off, and I started on Jon
Berry’s book bought solely on the basis of enjoying his previous books;
A Can of Worms and Beneath
the Black Water.The former
becoming, in my view, the very best reference point for anything barbel. The
later for being one of the few books that I’ve read once, and then picked it up
straight away to read again.
The book is
primarily trying to retrace train journeys carried out in the late 1800’s to the
1960’s to fish away from city/industrial squalor, to the countryside, the
subtitle being, A return ticket to the
golden age of fishing.
Jon takes
us, giving a little history on the way, to Derbyshire and the trout
streams, the mountains streams of Wales, the seaside towns of Looe, Southsea
and Whitby, the Thames, the Hampshire Avon Royalty, the Norfolk Broads , Lake
Windemere and the Scottish Highlands.
He fishes,
he sometimes catches, but all in all reminds us of what used to be before
Doctor Beeching short-sightedly, in my view, shut railway lines and closed vast
areas of the country from the pleasures of rail journeys for our leisure in
favour of the motor car.
So it was
4pm when I started this review, it
follows intermittent breaks for me to prepare
the vegetables, make the batter puds,
cook the rib of beef Sunday lunch, and drink bottles of London Pride and
Pedigree and assist The Boss drink a bottle of Hermitage, some of the remains
of our Christmas stock.
Having just finished the book I may well pick it up again,
but I hear Johnnie Walker with the Sounds of the 70’s on in the background, so it
probably won’t be today.
So in short, a very
good read of 187 pages and highly recommended.
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