I just ordered Ride of the Century. Someone shared excerpts with me (so that I can create a section on the ETS wiki page which covers its history), and it seems to go into a fair bit of detail. Is it worth owning both books?
Oh totally! I'd say if you're into transit history it's well worth having both. They're great compliments because they both set out to do different things.
Ride is a more generalized history, while
Electric is a more specialized history. Both books are excellent works as standalones, but together they create a really comprehensive picture of the system's history and development.
For instance,
Electric has a whole chapter explaining the rational, from both E.R.R. higher-ups and City councilmembers, about the introduction of the trolleybus system — something
Ride covers in far less detail. On the other hand,
Electric doesn't really detail the City's decision to introduce diesel buses in 1932 —
Ride does.
Ride, as a history of the Transit System as an organization, doesn't spend much time detailing the independently owned, funded, and operated Edmonton Interurban Railway —
Electric spends a chapter on it
(despite them being diesel vehicles).
It's that kind of back-and-forth that makes for something really special between the two. I will say though,
Ride does have a leg up on
Electric just by virtue of being published in 2008. It's a whole twenty-five years newer than
Electric and has the benefit of being able to talk about the changes and developments that have happened since 1983.