![]() ![]() While the books and the show shared a relatively close relationship early on, with Christopher even writing at least one novel for the show to adapt stories from, due to displeasure with the shows increasing detachment from the novels grounded roots in favor of more outlandish scenarios after season 3, the Awdry family began to distance themselves from the show and the two would ultimately split and go down their own separate tracks after the early 1990s. However, what the series is undeniably most famous for, and arguably the reason why most today are even remotely familiar with the books at all, is that they would become the basis for the hugely popular and successful television show by Britt Allcroft, Thomas & Friends, which began airing in 1984. Thus, the books have gathered a large following amongst railway fans and adult readers, on top of children. They have even gone as far as to use real-life train incidents as the basis for several stories, with later books often commenting on the railway privatization and subsequent dieselisation that was rapidly occurring on railways across the UK at the time of their writing. The books have become beloved for not only their witty writing, utterly gorgeous artwork and the memorable cast of characters, but for how mundane and grounded they are in spite of the talking engines, with Wilbert and Christopher Awdry taking great measures to ensure everything about the engines and the railways they ran on are as accurate and close to real life as possible. While most of the books took place on the mainline North Western Railway, later books would showcase several other railways on the island, such as the narrow gauge Skarloey Railway, The miniature Arlesdale Railway and the mountain Culdee Fell Railway, each with their own cast of unique engines and misadventures separated from the mainline railway. A decade later, the series resumed under his son, Christopher Vere Awdry, who would go on to write 16 more novels in the series (as well as some additional tie-in stuff) until he also retired in 2011, making up for a whopping 42 books.Įvery book contains a small collection of short stories that revolve around a large Ensemble Cast of talking engines owned by the Fat Controller, and the various misadventures they have on the island of Sodor, a fictional island set right in-between Great Britain and the Isle of Man. ![]() The original Railway Series consists of 26 books and ran from 1945 to 1972, in which Wilbert retired afterwards. Originally starting off as small stories to entertain his son Christopher, thanks to a little convincing by his wife, he would go on to publish these stories in a short childrens book called The Three Railway Engines in 1945, kickstarting the series. Reginald Dalby became the illustrator of The Railway Series in 1948, he redrew Middleton’s illustrations and it is Dalby’s version that remains in print today.The Railway Series is a series of British children's books that started in the mid 1940s by the late Reverend Wilbert Awdry (or Rev. Awdry was not particularly happy with the way Middleton portrayed the characters and when C. The first edition of this book was illustrated by William Middleton. This was changed in very early reprints and also, in the 1946 reprint, there was an advert page at the back of the book, so for the true first edition this should not be present. For instance, the dust-wrapper of the first edition should have a price of 4/- and the character we know so well from The Railway Series “the Fat Controller” should be referred to as “the Fat Director”. Until this book came into stock in November 2020 I did not realise that there were factors that needed to be considered when it came to identifying a true first edition of the book. ![]() ![]() I am always amazed at how much knowledge is acquired and required in the day to day running of a children’s book department in a second-hand bookshop. The fourth story, “Edward, Gordon and Henry” was specifically requested by the head of the children’s book division of Edmund Ward Publishers to bring the three engines together and thus redeem Henry, who in a previous story had been bricked up in a tunnel! Awdry had not actually intended that the three engines live on the same railway, but he did comply with this request. ![]()
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