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[T7E]≫ Libro Gratis The Night Operator Classic Reprint Frank Lucius Packard 9781334149764 Books

The Night Operator Classic Reprint Frank Lucius Packard 9781334149764 Books



Download As PDF : The Night Operator Classic Reprint Frank Lucius Packard 9781334149764 Books

Download PDF The Night Operator Classic Reprint Frank Lucius Packard 9781334149764 Books

Excerpt from The Night Operator

Many of these have lived their lives, done their work, passed on, and left no record, barely a memory, behind them, as other men in other places and in other spheres of work have done and always will do; but others, for, this or that, by circumstance, or personality, or opporb tunity, have woven around themselves the very legends and traditions of their environment.

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This book is a reproduction of an important historical work. Forgotten Books uses state-of-the-art technology to digitally reconstruct the work, preserving the original format whilst repairing imperfections present in the aged copy. In rare cases, an imperfection in the original, such as a blemish or missing page, may be replicated in our edition. We do, however, repair the vast majority of imperfections successfully; any imperfections that remain are intentionally left to preserve the state of such historical works.

The Night Operator Classic Reprint Frank Lucius Packard 9781334149764 Books

If you didn't know who the author was for this collection of short stories then you'd never connect this book to the hugely influential Gray Seal series which also written by Frank. L. Packard. None of these stories are set in New York and most of them spotlight a different character in each tale. The time is the second half of the Nineteen Century, and the setting is the Hill District, a department of the Transcontinental Railroad that runs through the Canadian Rocky Mountains. A rough territory calling for rough men who nevertheless share a common pride in their status as railroad workers.
These stories don't involve life or death struggles against depraved big city criminals like you'll find in the Gray Seal books. Here the stakes are smaller and the tone usually much lighter. Think of Big Cloud, the frontier town where the Hill Division is based, in terms of a 1950s television western. There are a few continuing characters, in this case District Superintendent Carlton and his 'Master Mechanic' Tommy Reagan, who act as a sort of Matt Dillon and Festus team a la 'Gunsmoke,' but the focus for each short story is usually someone else. Specifically a man never referenced before and never seen afterwards who has to overcome some moral or physical challenge.
The trouble is that those characters are usually rather one-dimensional and their struggles not all that interesting. To be sure Packard writes knowledgeably about railroad life, but that by itself wasn't enough to hold my interest. There is the comedic element which appears in most of these stories, but that frequently fell flat for me as well. A bit too heavy-handed for my tastes. F. L. Packard is certainly not in the class of P. G. Wodehouse (who is?)
I rate this one two and a half stars. I didn't get much pleasure in reading it but it wasn't bad enough for me to give up on it either.
As an aside the newspaper in Big Cloud is the Daily Sentinel, just like in the Green Hornet series. Hornet co-creator George W. Trendle was a Packard fan so it's quite possible he got the name from this very book!

Product details

  • Paperback 338 pages
  • Publisher Forgotten Books (January 22, 2018)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10 1334149763

Read The Night Operator Classic Reprint Frank Lucius Packard 9781334149764 Books

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The Night Operator Classic Reprint Frank Lucius Packard 9781334149764 Books Reviews


Easy reading for me. I expected the ending of each chapter sooner than it came, so each seemed to drag on a bit, and the language seemed a little awkward at times. I had wondered about railroad workers during that time period, and Packard helped satisfy my curiosity.
Some might be put off by the writing style which was appropriate to the time period it was written in. But it's not as overwrought as say Clive Cussler's potboilers and it provides a reasonable story and explanation of the technology of the time.
Although the dialects can be troublesome, the story told is a good one! Beautiful insights as to what early railroading must have been like. Stay with the story, you won't regret it!!
This is a fine collection of tales from the old days of railroading, when smoke and cinders filled the air and the wail of the steam whistle spoke of a passing train. The stories are original, interesting, and as far from the everyday as you can get. Unless of course your everyday was working the Hill Division in the Rockies round the turn of the last century. Step on into the caboose, throw an extra chunk of wood in the old pot-bellied stove, pull yourself a chaw of tobacco or stoke your pipe, put your feet up and listen to some yarns of the days when steam engines roared and the clickity-clack of the rails and the clicking of the telegraph were music to the ears of railroad men. Steams up, we've got our running orders, the line ahead is clear, all aboard!
I read a lot of books, but very, very few have "staying power," meaning I think about them for a long time after I've finished them. This is one special book, which appeals to my love of storytelling, adventure, bravery, and pulls on my emotions as I am reading. It's a keeper. I love this book with the same sense of wonder as generated when I read about high-seas adventures.
Great writer, wonderful story, the paperback edition issued August 2017 is just awful. Some sort of budget operation, appeared to have taken a scan off of the net and did a crap OCR job and printed it out without proofing it. Tons of paragraph returns in the middle of paragraphs, "Big Cloud" printed as "Big Qould," spurious characters everywhere. Very aggravating. Too bad.The night operator . By Frank L. Packard
If you didn't know who the author was for this collection of short stories then you'd never connect this book to the hugely influential Gray Seal series which also written by Frank. L. Packard. None of these stories are set in New York and most of them spotlight a different character in each tale. The time is the second half of the Nineteen Century, and the setting is the Hill District, a department of the Transcontinental Railroad that runs through the Canadian Rocky Mountains. A rough territory calling for rough men who nevertheless share a common pride in their status as railroad workers.
These stories don't involve life or death struggles against depraved big city criminals like you'll find in the Gray Seal books. Here the stakes are smaller and the tone usually much lighter. Think of Big Cloud, the frontier town where the Hill Division is based, in terms of a 1950s television western. There are a few continuing characters, in this case District Superintendent Carlton and his 'Master Mechanic' Tommy Reagan, who act as a sort of Matt Dillon and Festus team a la 'Gunsmoke,' but the focus for each short story is usually someone else. Specifically a man never referenced before and never seen afterwards who has to overcome some moral or physical challenge.
The trouble is that those characters are usually rather one-dimensional and their struggles not all that interesting. To be sure Packard writes knowledgeably about railroad life, but that by itself wasn't enough to hold my interest. There is the comedic element which appears in most of these stories, but that frequently fell flat for me as well. A bit too heavy-handed for my tastes. F. L. Packard is certainly not in the class of P. G. Wodehouse (who is?)
I rate this one two and a half stars. I didn't get much pleasure in reading it but it wasn't bad enough for me to give up on it either.
As an aside the newspaper in Big Cloud is the Daily Sentinel, just like in the Green Hornet series. Hornet co-creator George W. Trendle was a Packard fan so it's quite possible he got the name from this very book!
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