Rival Rails: The Race to Build America’s Greatest Transcontinental Railroad
Walter R. Borneman, Random, $28 (432p) ISBN 978-1-4000-6561-5
Railroads might seem outmoded today, but they were originally dynamic, cutthroat enterprises, according to this byzantine business history of track laying in the American West. Independent historian Borneman (Polk) chronicles the post–Civil War scramble to build a web of transcontinental railroads, lavish land grants, and government subsidies. Dozens of railroads and their executives are featured, but the melee eventually gels into a showdown between the Southern Pacific, intent on monopolizing the routes into California, and the Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fe, determined to reach the Pacific by a prized snow-free southerly route. The region’s rugged topography forces railroads to compete for a handful of one-track-wide mountain passes and river crossings; rivals throw down miles of track per day to reach strategic junctions and occasionally send armed gangs to seize choke points. Borneman’s evocations of railroad culture—the construction feats, boom-and-bust railhead towns, train robbers, and luxury cars—add color but are skimpy. He centers the story instead on boardroom maneuverings, and while railroad tycoons are a colorful lot, their deal-making begins to blur. As empire-building bequeaths corporate consolidation, Borneman’s narrative runs out of steam before reaching the terminal. 16 pages of photos, 30 maps. (Sept. 28)
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Reviewed on: 05/17/2010
Genre: Nonfiction