The Complete Book of the Tube is a comprehensive guide to the London Underground, combining a historical overview, archive illustrations and brand new photography. The story of the Tube from its origins to the present day is told through eleven chapters, relating to the eleven lines in broad chronological sequence. Each line is accompanied by ‘photographic portraits’ of key stations along the route, with evocative images of their architecture and decor. Interspersed with the chapters are features covering every aspect of the Underground: trains, art and design, hidden stations, maps and posters. The book is illustrated throughout with archive photography and images from the TfL archives. The lively pages are adorned with side-bars with anecdotes, facts and figures, hidden details and ‘Poems on the Underground’.
Alright full disclosure, I read this book for a script that I am writing, but I also low-key love mass transit, so this was work and play. I don't care if you think it's weird for someone to read a book about the history of the London Underground and be enthralled the whole time. It's weird, I know it, but this book was extremely informative and I would have read seven more chapters. Also, the photography in this book is excellent.
Nowadays we mostly read on our phones or tablets, and it's easy to forget the pleasurable visceral experience that you feel upon reading a printed book.
This large format book certainly doesn't disappoint, written in collaboration with London Transport, giving the publishers access to the transport authority's vast photo library to reproduce dozens of historic photographs and retro posters showing the development of the London Underground. Award-winning photographer Benjamin Graham gives this book its magnificent pictures of the modern Underground.
As a research fellow at the London Transport Museum, Oliver Green demonstrates his detailed knowledge of the subject. Unlike many academics, he can engagingly write about tunnel engineering, graphic design, station architecture and rolling stock design in an accessible style which moves you effortlessly through the history of the Underground.
This excellently designed book makes use of the Johnson typeface (the corporate style of the Underground). For the folios and the break-outs, an adaption of Beck's coloured map lines is a clever device.
Frank Pick, who did more to unify the Underground to the transport system we've inherited today described the Tube as "the framework of the town", this book brilliantly describes this framework.
I’ve been reading this as a coffee table book on and off for the most part of the year in addition to my regular novels; and what a book!
Every time I dipped into this it was either a few pages of interesting facts or stunning pictures. Ever since I first went on the tube as a child I’ve been in awe at its scale, efficiency and ultimately, how something so vast could be created under a city so busy. This book explains it all from the cut and cover method of building underground train lines beneath roads, to the development of the shield method of digging tunnels under the foundations of historic buildings and the river Thames.
From the visionaries, engineers, managers and businessmen John Fowler, Charles Pearson, Charles Yerks to Harry Beck’s iconic tube map design. This covers everything from the first tube in 1863 to the modern Elizabeth Line.
The old-school posters “don’t doze off for 20mins or you’ll end up in Walthamstow!” to the amazing images of the tube architecture and art, this book is richly researched and detailed.
Recommended?: even for those with a passing interest this is a great book. For the history, the art, the images, this is an interesting book at the turn of every page.
I saw this book after I returned from my trip to London. I was curious about London’s Tube system and how it came to be. I’ve heard that it was also used as a bomb shelter during WW2. I was surprised by how detailed this book was and interesting the history was! It definitely lent to the growth of London and its suburbs. I would recommend this for anybody who had used the Tube and had any curiosity about it.
a very interesting book , lots of information on the ever developing tube a must for anyone interested in how the tube came about brilliant photo throughout its history