Like most, I found that Covid-19 lockdown freed up a lot of time, which I sometimes struggled to fill. I started to read more and found new subjects, both in fiction and non-fiction to occupy my mind. I remember books I read when I was in my teens and decided to revisit them.
One author that I remember being fond of was Nevil Shute, not because of who he was (I didnt give it much thought at the time), but that his novels were well written and the plots rather engaging. In lockdown, I have started to work my way through his titles again and am glad I have rediscovered this man. 50+ years on with a career in engineering behind me, his books take on a different dimension. I now realise that he was a very capable aeronautical engineer in his own right, working under the likes of Barnes Wallace, before he pursued a writing career.
I made the mistake of starting with "On The Beach", a bit gloomy for current times. The next was "Trustee From The Toolroom", which resonated with the inner engineer from the start. It wasn't that many pages in before names like Myford, Boxford, Herbert and Boley jumped out of the page. The main character could be one of many regular contributors to ME and MEW. The writing style is of a more gentle age, no crash, bang wallop, bed hopping excitement, but very gripping nonetheless. To all of you model engineers out there who have not read his works, if nothing else, try this one as a bit of bedtime reading.
Edited By Mike Woods 1 on 05/07/2020 15:49:48