Friday, October 22, 2021

Friday Reads: Transit in the Triangle

Happy Friday! Today our Library director, Dr. Stanley, muses on the evolution of mass transit as he tells us about Transit in the Triangle by Blaine S. Hays and James A Toman.




Being a railfan and a former volunteer at the Pennsylvania Trolley Museum I was elated when I
came across this book. Public transit was used by the majority of the population in the early part
of the 20th century. Not everyone owned a car which necessitated other means to get from one
place to another. In the Pittsburgh area as well as Westmoreland County, before buses came on
the scene people relied on trolleys, also referred to as streetcars. This book gives an excellent
overview of public transportation by rail, showing the evolution of transit from horse-drawn
streetcars to electric powered vehicles. However, progress cannot be stopped and as cars became
more affordable to the general population, the streetcars, which had many roads to themselves,
found the need to share space with not only cars but also buses. The latter two could get people
to places quickly and weren’t reliant on the set routes of rail vehicles. This began the decline of
the rail industry, completely wiping it out in many areas. Interestingly, as mass transit continues
to develop, rail vehicles are seeing a surge in popularity. So the pendulum has swung back!


Editor's note: The Trolley Museum is well worth a visit, even on a rainy day! 




Friday, October 1, 2021

Friday Reads: From Here to Eternity

 We're kicking off October with a Halloween-appropriate read: From Here to Eternity: Traveling the World to Find the Good Death by Caitlin Doughty. Our Public Services Librarian, Kelly Clever, tells us about this unique twist on the travel writing genre. 

Kelly Clever holding an ereader displaying the cover of From Here to Eternity

Fun fact about me: I sort of grew up in a cemetery. By that, I mean that the "family business" of my family of origin is operating a memorial park. We also took a lot of road trips when I was younger, and my dad took a professional interest in other cemeteries, so we always visited the burial places of the areas we visited. This book is like that but on steroids. And with a lot more discussion of decay. 

Caitlyn Doughty is probably best-known for her YouTube channel, Ask a Mortician. The same funny-yet-respectful, lightheartedly-morbid tone of her videos pervades this book. I'm not very far into it, but so far she has traveled to a remote town in Colorado to visit the only legal open-air funeral pyre in the United States. She has also taken an arduous 30-hour trip to the Torajan region of Indonesia, where dead people are considered still alive for the first few months or years (they're described as ill or feverish but still cognizant) and go on "living" in the home with their families. 

This book and Caitlin's YouTube channel are not going to be everyone's cup of tea, but I find it comforting to reflect on the universality of death and how it is not truly an end. Every culture has rituals around mourning, the treatment of the body, and grief, and in every culture, those still alive must find a way to go on living after loss. I would rather not do that with a mummified body in my living room, but it's nice to reflect that many peoples do not perceive the same rigid division between life and death that modern American culture usually does.