I found this book in a charity shop, and despite having no interest whatsoever in trains, I do love ghost and horror story anthologies and read a lot of them. This one was so much better than I expected, as I had only read two of the stories previously, and the stories on the whole were of a really high standard.
Three alone were worth the price of the book and were absolute standouts which I’ll read again;
The Wrong Station, A M Burrage: a very sad and affecting tale that I found quite moving.
Branch Line to Benceston, Andrew Caldecott: one of the most inventive and intriguing stories I’ve read. As someone who has extremely vivid dreams, I could relate to this one.
The Town Where No One Got Off, Ray Bradbury: I’m a huge fan of Bradbury anyway, and have worked my way through most of his short stories. This one is more than excellent, on par almost with Silent Snow, Secret Snow by Conrad Aiken, which is the best short story I’ve ever read, so praise indeed. I’m almost scared to watch the tv episode with Jeff Goldblum incase they’ve ruined it. Beautiful writing, a sense of deep longing, detachment from reality and a subtle, moving ending.