An illustrated history of a legendary American toy.
Carp, who served as senior editor at Classic Toy Trains magazine for 20 years, here combines narrative with dozens of photos to tell the history and surprising social impact of the iconic Lionel Train sets that thousands of Americans young and old enjoyed for decades, particularly at the peak of their popularity in the latter half of the 20th century. Carp traces the origins of the line, providing running biographical accounts of the men and women who worked behind the scenes to design both the trains and their elaborate settings, with their miniature houses and scenery and control towers. He introduces people like craftsmen Robert Sherman and Arthur Zirul, “wizards at envisioning entire settings for Lionel trains.” Through text and photos, Carp illustrates the birth and growth of a popular toy idea, describing everything from the design specifics that would allow longer and more complex trains to maneuver on straight tracks and curves to the all-important marketing campaigns that made the latest Lionel train model every year’s must-have Christmas present. He presents all this in the form of a series of mini essays on various aspects of the Lionel story, and he fills these vignettes with the perfect blend of expert knowledge and fan enthusiasm. Doubtless many of his readers had Lionel trains in their childhood, maybe doted over the details or eagerly sought out some hard-to-find item, and those readers will be completely captivated by this train ride down Memory Lane, here invaluably assisted by all the photos Carp has included, which are of course the book’s most prominent asset. But the quiet wonder of the book is its accessibility. Even readers who’d never before heard of Lionel trains will likely find themselves caught up in the story of how these train sets so captured a part of the zeitgeist.
A visually engrossing, thorough history of how Lionel trains came into being and ruled the toy world.