Logo

 

Banner Image:   Baptist-Times-banner-2000x370-
Template Mode:   Baptist Times
Icon
    Post     Tweet

The Thomas the Tank Engine Man 

Biography of the committed clergyman behind the famous tank engine 

Thomas the tankThe Thomas the Tank Engine Man
The life of Reverend W. Awdry
By Brian Sibley
Lion Hudson
ISBN 978-0-7459 7029 5
Reviewed by Martin Poole

Thomas the Tank Engine is an industry with book sales of 201 million and a plethora of branded goods – notebooks, duvet covers, toothbrushes, mugs as well as lunch boxes fit for royalty (one carried by Prince William on his first day at school)
 
However its origins over 70 years ago are extremely modest and lie in a room darkened by drawn curtains where three year old Christopher Awdry is battling with childhood measles. To alleviate his son’s boredom the caring father, Church of England vicar and railway enthusiast the Revd Wilbert Awdry, composes an imaginative story about a railway engine called Edward (Thomas would come later).
 
Brian Sibley presents a most detailed biography which seeks to cover Awdry’s life, but occasionally Gordon, James, Edward, and Thomas of course, shunt him into a siding to allow considerable space to introduce the various story lines of each of Awdry’s 26 titles. He also analyses the sub text of the stories that display a very ordered world and the class system of the mid 20th century replicated in the characters of the books – the snooty Gordon to the tank engines, and finally the oily disel and the dirty coal trucks.
 
On the Island of Sodor – Awdry’s Narnia – Sibley highlights a strong Christian theme that emerges in a majority of tales: it's a place where justice is fair, where there is freewill to obey or not, and forgiveness and reconciliation is unreserved.
 
Yet the biography does make it clear that Awdrey is nonetheless a highly committed clergyman first and children’s writer second. Another of his titles that possibly could have had even more far reaching results was Our Child begins to pray – a manual for parents based on Awdry’s experience in cultivating his own three children’s spirituality. His sermons, like his stories were short and to the point and he engaged children by using alliterative names – Thomas Trickletrout, Fred Fiddlestring –  to illustrate profound truths of the faith. In these, perhaps, he fulfilled his self-chosen epitaph – “He helped people see God in the ordinary things of life and he made children laugh.”
 
The book also gives many fascinating insights such as when “Ringo met Wilbert” and how the Andrew Lloyd Webber musical Starlight Express could have featured Thomas.
 
A continuing refrain of Awdry’s books occurs when the Fat Controller gives the ultimate accolade by declaring that an engine has proved himself to be “a really useful engine”. Is that reminiscent of the – “Well done my good and faithful servant” of scripture?
 
A book for those who refuse to leave Thomas in the toy cupboard.

 
The Revd Martin Poole (retired Baptist Minister having served churches in Penarth, Godalming and Eastleigh)


 
Baptist Times, 16/12/2016
    Post     Tweet
Bless the work of our hands: prayers and reflections for creatives
​'This book will be appreciated by many - it contains well-written and honest prayers for many parts of the creative process'
Archbishop Sarah Mullally, by Andrew Atherstone
Atherstone goes beyond these headlines to give us a greater sense of Mullally’s life - a helpful account of the new Archbishop
The Big C and Me, by Andy Robinson
A reminder that life in Christ is lived boldly, even in the shadow of difficulty and that the question “What now?” is far richer than “Why me?”
What is Wrong with the World? By Timothy Keller
​Posthumous book of Keller's sermons is 'a theologically and biblically literate proclamation of good news, which must always start with the bad news... no message of 'cheap grace', but one of radical repentance'
Coming to Faith Through Dawkins: 12 Essays on the Pathway from New Atheism to Christianity
These 12 essays shed light on why some people who have tried new atheism have found it wanting
When I am Among Friends I am Least Disabled, by Martin Hobgen
'A book to be read by those working in disability theology as a discipline, but also holds important insights for church congregations and pastors as a whole'
    Posted: 24/10/2025
    Posted: 10/10/2025
    Posted: 18/07/2025
     
    Text Size:  
    Small (Default)
    Medium
    Large
    Contrast:  
    Normal
    High Contrast