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The train which crashed was an Inter-City Express (ICE), specifically
the Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen, ICE 884. I believe a dozen years
have passed since the Trans-Europe Express (which Kraftwerk sang about) was
replaced by the ICE. I've walked around inside an ICE train waiting on a
platform, but I haven't actually ridden one - the surcharge is quite high,
and I've never been in that much of a hurry. Both the Inter-City (IC) and
ICE trains have a surcharge (or Zuschlag) on top of the usual fare,
which are specific to a scheduled train - hence you're inhibited from
hopping off an IC if the town looks interesting, because you'll have to pay
another 8DM Zuschlag if the next train's also an express. And the ICE isn't
stopping anyway. I rode once on the Trans-Europe Express (TEE) - I think
that was in 1984, but it may have been earlier, in '78. The trip wasn't
long, I think from The Hague (where the British ferries dock)
to Düsseldorf, but I wanted to experience the "top of the line".
The doors at the end of each carriage opened automatically, and
there were pay-phone booths opposite the WC.
There's a book I'd love to get, but I know almost nothing about
how to identify it - all I have is a strong tropical memory from 1966:
That year, for reading/social studies, we had brand-new books. (This was
my last year in that school, sixth grade.) There was a story near the
front of this book about an island boy, perhaps in Hawaii or somewhere
in the South Pacific. The climax was when he rode a slide and either got
in trouble, because he did it the night before he was supposed to, or
rides was reserved for royalty and he was forbidden, and/or maybe by riding
it then he saved the day - whatever, it was a polished run down the side
of the mountain, like a flume. The story wasn't what sent me, so much
as these bright pictures: so evocative of that polynesian fantasy - golden-brown
people living happily in an oceanside jungle wearing colorful garments
(and right about then was when I got my first Hawaiian shirts). One especially
memorable illustration showed him on the mountain-top - dark blue
night-time skies behind him, and below, yellow reflections off
the cobalt-blue ocean. I remember once prowling that school's hallways
years later when I was there to see a play featuring my little brother N.
The old custodian (Mr. Briscoe) confronted and challenged me, asking my
purpose - I could only babble guiltily. The rows of books in the bookshelves
I was scanning in those familiar old hallways had no recognizable spines. A
good thing, I guess - had I found it I would've tried to swipe a copy, and
just imagine the humiliation of a special night-time office visit with Mr.
Lloyd, my old paddle-wielding principle, years after my graduation! <1>
I'm giving up on Riddley Walker by Russell Hoban (he also wrote
Turtle Diary). This book looks interesting, it's a post-apocalyptic set in
England but reading it's just too much work. The first-person narrative is written
entirely in this future-possible dialect, all phonic-spelling and abbreviated. I want to
know what happens, but the vocabulary gets dense and there's no glossary in the
back. <2>. Something
light and science-fictiony is probably the next book.
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