Talking Transportation: Memoirs of a Metro-North Conductor

Jim Cameron

Being a train conductor seems like a simple, boring job: collecting tickets, opening and closing doors, reminding people to keep their feet off the seats. Yawn.

But there’s a lighter side to the job, as I wrote a few years ago, based on former conductor Michael Shaw’s great book, “My Rail Life,” after he retired from a 36-year career on the New Haven line. He clearly loved his job. And he swears these stories are true.

He once told passengers on a standing-room only train: “OK, folks. We are half way to Grand Central. It’s time for everyone who’s been seated to get up and give their seats to folks who’ve been standing.”

Asked by a passenger boarding at Grand Central, “What times does this train arrive in Stamford?” he answered candidly, “Usually about 20 minutes after the schedule says.”

On another train he announced: “Folks, I have good news and bad news. The good news is that Metro-North fixed the air conditioning you complained about not having all summer long. The bad news it’s now winter.”

Honest to a fault, he turned in everything left by passengers on his train to the Metro-North Lost and Found … even an envelope containing $400 in cash. (The lost money wasn’t claimed so he got it back.) On several occasions, he’d find a lost briefcase or cell-phone and personally return it to the owner’s home the same day.

He also loved razzing his fellow railroad workers, once announcing, “If you have any railroad questions or would like to take your picture with a real railroad engineer, come to the front of the train and say hello to Jerry, who loves chatting with people.” The engineer’s name was not Jerry and the real man at the controls really didn’t like people.

Approaching Bridgeport, Shaw announced the connection for the Waterbury train, adding “Be sure to ask your Waterbury conductor for one of the free 100 Years Commemorative pins.” There were no such pins.

On Friday late night trains, Shaw would bet with his fellow conductors watching drunk passengers boarding at Grand Central, guessing who would be first to throw up. Shaw immediately chose a 95-pound blonde he saw staggering to the nearest car with her equally inebriated boyfriend. Even before leaving the station his co-worker came and gave him his winnings.

Shaw always went out of his way to keep passengers informed about delays. In the horrendous winter of 2014 when the railroad almost ground to a halt, he printed a one-page apology for the previous day’s delays and did his own seat-drop of 500 copies before the train left New Haven. His regular passengers were so grateful for his candor, they gave him a standing ovation as he entered each car to collect tickets. His railroad bosses were not amused.

Approaching an obviously “senior” citizen to collect his fare, the old timer asked if Shaw needed his ID to prove his age. Saying that wouldn’t be necessary, the old timer asked, “Are you saying I look too old?” “No,” said Shaw. “You look honest.”

On another occasion he approached an elderly, grey-haired woman, who wanted to buy a senior-discount ticket. “Are you over 65?,” he asked in a teasing voice. “Actually, I’m 82” she said. “Well, you look marvelous!,” said Shaw, asking “What’s your secret?” Without a smile or batting an eyelash, she said “Rough sex.”

If you need a good chuckle, you’ll love this book.

Editor’s Notes: i) Jim Cameron is the founder of the Commuter Action Group and advocates for Connecticut rail riders. He writes a weekly column called ‘Talking Transportation,’ which is published by a number of publications in the state.
ii) ”Talking Transportation” won first place in the general column/commentary category in the 2024 Connecticut Society of Professional Journalists Excellence in Journalism Contest.

SECWAC Hosts Historian Julia Irwin to Speak in Old Lyme on Her ‘Catastrophic Diplomacy’ Book

Historian Julia Irwin

OLD LYME–On Monday, Oct. 6, the Southeast Connecticut World Affairs Council (SECWAC) will host historian Julia Irwin for a talk on her book, “Catastrophic Diplomacy: US Foreign Disaster Assistance in the American Century.”

Irwin’s presentation will begin at 6 p.m. in the First Congregational Church of Old Lyme and online. It will be preceded by a reception at 5:30 p.m.

SECWAC in an event description said Irwin, a history professor at Louisiana State University, will discuss her account of how the United States came to use foreign disaster assistance as a key instrument of diplomacy throughout the twentieth century. 

Spanning the early 1900s to the mid-1970s, the book examines how the U.S. government, military, and voluntary organizations responded to major international catastrophes—including earthquakes, tropical storms, and floods—and how these efforts shaped the broader landscape of American foreign relations. 

By weaving together diplomatic, military, environmental, and humanitarian histories, Irwin reveals the complex politics behind emergency aid and situates U.S. responses within a larger global context. Her work demonstrates the central, and often overlooked, role that disaster relief played in advancing American influence abroad.

Irwin earned her doctoral degree in history from Yale University and is a founding co-editor of The Journal of Disaster Studies and the book series InterConnections: The Global 20th Century. Her scholarship has been recognized with numerous national honors, including the Stuart L. Bernath Lecture Prize from the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations.

SECWAC members are free. Non-Member in-person attendance is $20. Non-Members may visit this link to register. A post-presentation dinner will follow at the Old Lyme Inn for members only. 

For more information on SECWAC, visit their website.

TOP STORY: A Tale for All Ages: Lyme’s Faulkner Hunt Revives the Classic Spirit of Adventure in Debut Novel Published Sept. 23

Author Faulkner Hunt sits down at Ashlawn Farm Coffee in Old Saybrook on Sept. 11, 2025, in the leadup to the Sept. 23 publication of his first book.

LYME–Frustrated screenwriter-turned-author Faulkner Hunt’s first novel is a hardcover story for the ages in an era consumed with 30-second reels and 80-character posts on social media.

Hunt, a Texas transplant whose career spans the media and technology industries, has emerged with a back-to-basics approach that eschews the trappings of the digital world for pure storytelling.

“A book, at its worst, is a beautiful distraction,” he said. “At its best, it’s among the highest forms of art.”

The Ballad of Innes of Skara Skaill is set for release this month as an adventure story modeled after classics like Robert Louis Stevenson’s Treasure Island, Mark Twain’s Adventures of Huckleberry Finn and Rudyard Kipling’s The Jungle Book. Those are the bedtime tales he read to two boys and two girls, now grown, whose childhoods spanned decades. 

“I had kids in my house for 28 years,” he said of the 18th century farmhouse shared with wife Ann Lightfoot. “It felt like I was reading nonstop.” 

The couple, who met as students at Wallingford’s Choate Rosemary Hall boarding school, moved to Lightfoot’s hometown in Lyme in 2001. That was several jobs and two children after Hunt packed up his University of Texas degree and moved to New York just to be near Lightfoot again, “even though she may not have known it.” 

Their identical twin girls were born in Lyme. 

He described his own youth and time spent reading to their children as “classic training” in storytelling structure. But fast changing realities forced him to adjust his narrative view. 

“Look, if the world’s attention span is shorter, then you have to adapt to that,” he said. “And so this book is very much designed to be a page-turner. It’s written kind of like a screenplay is written, where there’s no wasted time, space, and you’re not meandering around listening to an author show off. It’s just very straightforward that way. It travels quick.”

Hunt’s years studying English and history at college, where he roomed with the now movie star Owen Wilson and traveled in the same circles as filmmaker Wes Anderson, helped forge an early affinity for screenwriting inspired by the burgeoning cinematic powerhouses. 

But when he couldn’t land a deal on any of several screenplays – including one project with Wilson’s backing about a scofflaw dad assigned by a judge to the Marine Corps – his plans changed. 

“I started thinking, well, maybe just write a book,” he said. After three years of writing, revising and pitching, he had it: 314 hardbound pages with cover art that revealed a Welsh woodcarving of the imaginary North Atlantic island of Skara Skaill. 

“It comes out September 23rd,” he said. “There it is; it’s the shape of a book.” 

The Ballad of Innes of Skara Skaill, published by Regalo Press, tells the story of a bereaved son, who takes up with two young brothers living on the village streets and moors of Skara Heath as they search for fortune and truth in the island’s buried past. 

Describing “a tale for all ages,” Faulkner said he sees the book as a story to be passed through the generations by word of mouth rather than marketed in a social media blitz. 

He admitted to a counter-revolutionary approach that comes at a time when authors, whether they land a traditional publisher or go the self-published route, must sell themselves aggressively online. 

“I have no social media presence, and I won’t,” he said. 

That doesn’t mean he won’t go on podcasts and talk with BookTok influencers. But he emphasized none of that outreach will point back to his own pages on the likes of X, Instagram and Facebook. 

His X account, going back to 2009, remains empty except for a profile picture of a father and child. 

“When I see a line of kids all together and they’re all staring at their phones, it literally just breaks my heart,” he said. “I think, ‘what are you missing?’ Everything! You’re missing it all.”

The Ballad of Innes of Skara Skaill goes on sale Sept. 23. Visit faulknerhunt.com for more information.

Editor’s Note: Visit this link to order a copy of the book.

SECWAC Hosts Author Talk in Old Lyme, Book Recounts Mother’s Real Life Escape, Survival on WWII Eastern Front

Charov will talk about the book she wrote based on her mother’s diaries.

OLD LYME–The Southeast Connecticut World Affairs Council (SECWAC) this month hosts author Helen Charov in a presentation on her book “Tatyana’s War: Escape and Survival on the Eastern Front in World War II.”

The Thursday, Sept. 25 event will be held at 6 p.m. in the First Congregational Church of Old Lyme. It will be preceded by a reception at 5:30 p.m.

SECWAC in an event description said Charon was born Brooklyn, New York, to émigré parents, who came to the U.S. as displaced persons after World War II. Charov grew up in Sea Cliff, a village on Long Island’s north shore. After graduating from New York University, she traveled extensively throughout the USSR with a U.S. government exhibit. She lives in Connecticut.

Charov’s book has its origin in diaries belonging to her mother that were found in a Connecticut attic. There, Charov discovered an account of her mother’s life as a teacher in the Stalinist Soviet Union, the 1941 Nazi invasion of Donetsk, her survival under Nazi occupation, and her harrowing escape to the West. 

“Tatyana’s War” tells the story of Tatyana Artemyeff, a 25-year-old teacher, as Nazi troops invaded her home of Donetsk, Ukraine, in 1941. The 25-year-old teacher was left on her own to save her two children and mother when her conscripted husband’s unit retreated from the city. Tatyana, who spoke German, was determined to find a way to survive the brutal occupation and keep her family from dying of starvation or execution.

SECWAC members are free. Non-Member in-person attendance is $20. Non-Member Visit this link to register.

For more information on SECWAC, visit their website.

92-Year-Old Alison Mitchell, Formerly of Old Lyme, Releases Second Children’s Book; Author Presentation in OL, Sept. 9

Children’s author Alison Mitchell is seen here at StoneRidge Senior Living in Mystic with Cappie, one of the canine companions who helped inspire her second children’s book.

Mitchell Presents Story about Canine Adventurers and Their Senior Companions at Old Lyme Church

MYSTIC, CT/OLD LYME—Author Alison Mitchell may be 92, she but isn’t letting age slow down her writing pursuits. 

That’s according to a publicist for StoneRidge Senior Living, where Mitchell, formerly of Old Lyme, just released her second book in as many years. The children’s tale was illustrated by Old Lyme resident Edie Twining and edited by Twining’s sister, Kinny Kreiswirth.

Townsend: The Positive Dog of Mystic Senior Living is a week-in-the-life tale of “Townie,” a mutt, who resides at a senior living community.

The trio last year collaborated on Letters to Papa: Summers in Old Lyme to benefit the Old Lyme Historical Society.

The adventures of Townie and his friends were inspired by the busy lives of actual canine residents of StoneRidge Senior Living in Mystic, according to the press release. 

“This was a fun group effort as I had plenty of StoneRidge friends suggesting names and activities for Townie to encounter,” said Mitchell. 

The book was self-published by Twining Design of Old Lyme. 

All profits from the sale of the book will be donated to the StoneRidge Scholarship Fund, which recognizes full-time employees and children of full-time employees, who are pursuing a post-secondary education. 

This year, the committee granted awards totaling $211,000 to 23 students who were selected on the basis of financial need, academic achievement, scholastic potential, and their commitment to career goals. 

Mitchell will give a presentation of the book on Tuesday, Sept. 9, at 1 p.m. in the First Congregational Church of Old Lyme, 4 Lyme Street.

A special presentation at StoneRidge Senior Living will be held at 4 p.m. on Aug. 22. Tickets are free but seating is limited and advanced reservations are required.  Call 860-780-0741 for tickets. 

Townsend: The Positive Dog of Mystic Senior Living is available for $16 and can be purchased at Bank Square Books (80 Stonington Road) or at the StoneRidge Country Store (186 Jerry Brown Road) in Mystic.