Between these two extremes are the stories of other people: the permanent way inspector, who every week walks through a long tunnel, looking for damage to the track; the retired old man who spends his mornings at the railway station and watches people as they arrive and depart; the woman who goes back to her husband to hammer out the details of their divorce; the train conductor, who is about to retire and on his last shift takes a nostalgic trip on a goods train through the Alps; the student of Logic, who is simply going home from University for the vacation and gets mixed up in an incident involving drugs at the border; and lastly the truck driver who, one night, in the middle of a storm, loses both his vehicle and a colleague.
These ‹Stories of the Rails› will envelop readers in a pleasant nostalgia for railways and rail travel – whilst at the same time deeply affecting them through the distressing situations they describe. The rattling and creaking of a bygone technology captures sketches of everyday life and casts an intense light on the life and times of the 20th century.
Recommended for translation by the Swiss Arts Council Pro Helvetia:
www.12swissbooks.ch
Translation of title: The Man Who Lives on Trains
Armando Dadò editore, Locarno 2012
ISBN: 978-88-8281-294-2