Tammy’s Reviews > The Great Train Robbery > Status Update
Tammy
is 3% done
I need a fast, easy read, and this was on sale at Audible. The intro tells what Victorians believed about criminals as well as the ability to solve crimes. Dickens is one of the few authors who wrote about criminals in big cities. There was such a fast shift from rural life to overflowing cities that the criminal underclass was not on their radar. It talks about what people thought about crime in the 1970s.
— 15 hours, 12 min ago
Like flag
Tammy’s Previous Updates
Tammy
is 4% done
Ch. 2 Edward Pierce is the mastermind between the 1855 train robbery. It is hard for us to imagine but his identity is hard to nail down. Is he a young gentleman gone rogue? A young gentleman down on his luck? An imposter? Rumors say that he made money from croquet or other successful speculations. It could be that he built his skill as a petty thief and conman.
— 10 hours, 44 min ago
Tammy
is 3% done
The young man tries to get up and fails. The situation is odd and mysterious to me because a half hour later, some rich guy shows up and uses binoculars to survey the scene from afar. He does not render help. He does not seem to care about the welfare of the young man. He watches long enough to ensure this guy is dead and then gets in his coach and heads to London on a road that is parallel to the railroad tracks.
— 12 hours, 18 min ago
Tammy
is 3% done
The first railway line was open between Liverpool and Manchester in 1830. It made the growth of cities possible. Part 1, Chapter 1 is short and mysterious. A young guy is trying to overpower the guard on a train. He comes close to winning, but the guard throws him off, and the young man rolls down the hill.
— 14 hours, 44 min ago
Tammy
is 3% done
Much of what was said about the 1970s does not apply today. There were a lot of unsolved crimes. Technology has allowed us to solve many crimes, including cold case crimes. However, criminals have also gotten more sophisticated. Early humans could travel no more than four mph. A trotting horse brought it up to 10 mph. Trains raised it to between 40 and 70 mph. Trains were far more comfortable than coaches.
— 15 hours, 1 min ago

