The
best bus books are like a good novel, a good play or a good
film. They
should draw you in and take you away to another time and
another place and make you feel you are there, experiencing
it for real. This book does that. It deals with a period
now long gone but, as you turn the pages, the intervening
years melt away and you start to smell the smells and hear
the sounds around you. A Midland Red Guy Arab drops off
a
lonely passenger in Dudley’s hills and powers off;
the buzz of the streets of Britain’s second city
is interrupted by a Corporation Daimler double-deck purring
through - and the buses go about their business passing
people
in the styles of the day, shops selling goods of the day,
and all oblivious to the photographer recording the moment
for posterity. Whether by design or accident, the photographers
here have all caught a slice of life where the compositions
tell a much bigger story that puts the bus into the context
of place and time.
Pure pleasure, a good read and a nostalgic journey.
Ray Stenning, Editor, Classic Bus
128 pages