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A Train through Time: A Life, Real and Imagined

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How much of our memory is constructed by our imagination? And how does that memory shape our paths, beliefs, and desires? As a nine-year old, Elizabeth Farnsworth struggled to accept the terrifying loss of her mother to cancer. The loss led to an unusual cross- country journey for Farnsworth and her father. En route to San Francisco from her home town of Topeka, Kansas, the heartsick child searches for her mother at train stations along the way. Even more, she searches for answers—answers to her mother’s death, the speed of time, and to a mysteriously locked compartment on the train.

Weaving a child’s imaginative adventures with vivid memories from her reporting in danger zones like Cambodia and Iraq, Farnsworth explores how she became involved in covering mass death and disaster. While she never breaks the tone of a curious investigator, she easily moves between her nine-year-old self and the experienced, hard-hitting journalist. Imagination is at play throughout her work, whether it be in her childhood adventures or in her narrative control, always with great purpose. She openly confronts the impact of her childhood on the route her life has taken. And, as she provides one beautifully crafted depiction after another, we share her journey, coming to know the acclaimed reporter as she discovers herself. Farnsworth’s curiosity lingers on every page of A Train Through Time: My Life Real and Imagined, and so does the making of a powerfully driven woman.

With Photo Art by Mark Serr.

160 pages, Hardcover

Published February 14, 2017

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Elizabeth Farnsworth

8 books6 followers

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Displaying 1 - 19 of 19 reviews
Profile Image for Diane S ☔.
4,901 reviews14.6k followers
March 11, 2017
When Elizabeth was a nine year old girl, her mother died from cancer, but she was told her mother went away. Not understanding the real meaning she searched at every stop on a train trip she took with her father from Topeka to San Francisco, for her mother. She also imbues this train trip with some imaginative features, tying together memory with imagination.

Alternating with this trip she talks about her later life job as chief correspondent for the Jim Lehrer News hour on PBS. A job that took her to the dangerous hotspots around the world, Haiti, Chile and Allende's run for President. After Pinochet's death she met with the family members, or those who were left, of the disappeared. Iraq after the fall of Saddam. So many dangerous places, places where she felt the world needed to know, places that by exposing what was really going on she could share and show she cared.

The writing, the tone is almost surrealistic, the prose almost poetic at times. Not a straightforward telling but a blend of fact and fantasy. I seem to respond well to books written like this, love the sense of discovery with which they are presented. She does tell us what was real or not about her train trip at book's end. All the pages about her professional life were true. Merging the difficult parts of her life together, one as a young girl, later a professional news correspondent dovetailed nicely, in my opinion, in giving Tue reader a well rounded, of short, glimpse of the, life of this remarkable woman.
Profile Image for Vicki.
402 reviews4 followers
April 15, 2018
Elizabeth Farnsworth is a journalist, who as a young girl lost her Mother to cancer. Consequently she and her father travel across the country by train from Kansas, getting stuck in the snow on a mountain in a blizzard. Some parts of her bio are real and some imagined. Glimpses, impressions. References to Frank Baum and the particular title of 'The Road to Oz' starring Tik-Tok, a white horse on her train on his way to replace the horse, 'Silver' on the 'Lone Ranger' and the story, 'The Gunniwolf' with the refrain, Kum kwa kee wa, a story I remember from my days as a library storyteller. These scenes are interwoven between Farnsworth's adult life reporting in war torn and dangerous parts of the world doing stories for 'The News Hour' Of particular focus was work on a movie called, 'The Judge and the General' (Judge Juan Guzman was the first Chilean judge to indict Augusto Pinochet for murder.)The remembrances are almost too brief to be fully realized.
107 reviews
May 21, 2017
mesmerizing, probably like the wizard of oz-mesmerizing. the first 2 pages were for me one of those 1st 2 page - read it a few times because i kept thinking i wasn't getting something and then the next few pages clarified that this book was going to unravel what those pages meant.

i actually don't even want to review this book. it is just so well done.
Profile Image for Betsy.
730 reviews7 followers
July 16, 2017
I was disappointed in this book by former PBS News Hour reporter, Elizabeth Farnsworth. The book's structure is interesting: she alternates between an account of a childhood train trip through the snowy West with some of her experiences reporting from dangerous places. Farnsworth's mother had just died at the time of the train trip, and her father took her across the country to see relatives in California. The book describes a train accident that actually happened due to snow, and Farnsworth's participation in events to keep the passengers - and a horse - warm and safe. Only at the end did the reader find that, although a snowstorm did stop a train at about that time in U.S. history, Farnsworth was not on that train; all those experiences are imagined. For me, that ruined the book, even though reading about her experiences as a journalist was fascinating. I'm not sure I understand how the train trip - much tamer than that portrayed in the book - prepared the author for her later life. That is supposed to be the point of the book. Oh, well . . . I did learn that Farnsworth produced, "The Judge and the General," a movie about Chile I've wanted to see. Now I will pursue that movie more vigorously.
1,623 reviews59 followers
June 20, 2017
I really wanted this book, by a regular PBS Newshour contributor, to live up to its WG Sebald ambitions, weaving something magical out of these trips to the past and sites of historical atrocities. But it's not that-- the big story from the past, about a train journey that means to anchor the rest of the more contemporary adventures, fails to come to much-- in fact, Farnsworth ends the telling too long after that story's natural climax, even if it was tied more resonantly to what surrounds it. And the more topical moments-- time with revolutionaries or survivors of state violence in Chile, Iraq, etc-- feel too oblique to me. I'm confident I've enjoyed some of Farnsworth's reporting in my life. But her book is preeminently skippable.
Profile Image for Kevin.
1,113 reviews56 followers
August 22, 2017
A weird but fascinating read. Part fictionalized childhood flashback, part memories of travels to war torn countries, it somehow comes together to offer a picture of the author and how she sees the world. It is admittedly impressionistic and something you can read in one sitting but it worked somehow for me. The universal search for meaning and connection in the face of death haunts the work but it also reminds of the comfort of friends and family, of the importance of seeking compassion and justice even when violence and loss see to overwhelm.
Profile Image for George.
342 reviews
August 11, 2017
I liked Elizabeth Farnsworth a lot when she was a regular on the PBS Newshour, so when I saw her interviewed about this book I bought the book promptly. It was a good purchase. It's an unusual book, mixing imagination and history, as well as covering moments of her childhood history and her experiences in dangerous foreign settings as a correspondent. Well worth reading.
102 reviews4 followers
July 8, 2017
Well written autobiography of this NPR correspondent; touchpoints become the connecting points of a full and fulfilling life. The story weaves through the eyes of a child, some imagination and hope for other things, reality of adult travels into war zones with colleagues.
522 reviews3 followers
February 19, 2019
Terrific memoir by the intrepid foreign correspondent explores her memory and imagination to discover hue she became who she is. The central train trip narrative is particularly compelling, as it illustrates many characteristics of a great reporter, such as curiosity and fearlessness.
Profile Image for Elizabeth.
Author 74 books183 followers
April 30, 2024
The author, a reporter for PBS News Hour follows two paths: childhood memories of the loss of her mother and the various experiences she had as a journalist reporting on war in places like Iran and Iraq.
Profile Image for Jackie Rogers.
1,187 reviews22 followers
March 11, 2018
This is a very well written little book. Are excerpts from Ms. Farnsworth life. Are they real or imagined? Thanks to Goodreads.
Profile Image for Isaac.
183 reviews14 followers
May 26, 2025
Wistful and compelling although not what I expected when taking it off the shelf at the library.
Profile Image for Tena.
855 reviews16 followers
March 22, 2017
I won this in a GOODREADS givaway -A Train through Time: A Life, Real and Imagined by Elizabeth Farnsworth -- wonderful little book of storys and adventures. Highly recomend.
402 reviews
April 13, 2017
I liked the stories about the train stuck in the blizzard, but was less interested in the later correspondent stories.
806 reviews
April 17, 2017
When Elizabeth was nine yrs. old, her mother died of breast cancer. She knew her mother was ill, but in no way was she prepared for her death. When it happened, the words used were 'lost' and 'passed on', and so the child continues to search for her, confused and upset for several months before her father finally uses the word, 'dead'. This period of her life is recounted through a train journey from home in Topeka to San Francisco in the year following the death.
Interspersed with memories of the journey are her adult experiences as a journalist, vivid accounts of violent losses of beloved family members, to bombs, guns, kidnappings, disappearances.
All is not bleak, however. Her symbols are powerful as they indeed need to be to express the emotional lightning strikes we visit upon each other. She manages to convey as well that there is beauty, too, in this broken world.
She learned early in life "to accept insecurity and to assertively embrace life which she knows to be fragile." Like Dorothy in the Oz books, she believes that finding a way to be useful to others while searching for a way home can be a great relief from the self.
Profile Image for Mary.
72 reviews9 followers
April 21, 2017
Saw this reviewed on PBS Newshour and had to read! I have always wondered how journalists have the courage to enter war torn, dictator-lead countries just carrying notebook, cameras, microphone. The author's childhood experiences explain how a person can develop the strength to go out and report on the immoral attacks on basic human rights around the world. This work must continue and I highly recommend this book.
Profile Image for Catherine.
1,071 reviews17 followers
April 29, 2017
Supposedly a memoir, the author alternates chapters about harrowing experiences as a foreign correspondent for PBS Newshour with a tale of an eventful train trip with her father as a child. Although the book jacket mentions that “imagination is at play throughout her work” the book is classified as nonfiction which led me to believe it’s, you know, true. The dominant story (the childhood trip) was the part I liked best, and then the author casually mentioned in the Afterward that most of it was fictionalized. Boo, hiss.
Displaying 1 - 19 of 19 reviews

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