p> <p> </p> <p> <H4>About the Book</H4> </p> </p> <p> <p><div align=justify>Early in Joe Harris&rsquo;s railroad career one of his supervisors told him &ldquo;You have to blow your own horn; nobody&rsquo;s going to blow it for you.&rdquo; Harris tried to live by these words. And in this memoir he also describes blowing a horn of another sort&mdash;that of a railroad engineer. Hell of a Way to Run a Railroad recaps Harris&rsquo;s thirty-six-year stint working on the railroad&mdash;from his debut as an electrician&rsquo;s helper in 1969 with the Burlington Northern Railroad to becoming an engineer in 1974. In his thirty years working as a locomotive engineer Harris hit twenty vehicles and killed three people with the train. With a focus toward safety Harris discusses becoming a volunteer presenter with Operation Lifesaver a program designed to help save people&rsquo;s lives around railroad tracks. Including a comprehensive glossary of railroad terminology Hell of a Way to Run a Railroad presents a fascinating look into the many and varied facets of working on the railroad with both passenger trains and freight trains&mdash;from the interesting locals to the quirky co-workers. </p> </p> <p> <br clear=all> </p>
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