Last of the Privatisation Jihadis?
He produced a glowing review, except on those sections of Wolmar's tome covering recent history.
"He paints the BR of Richard Marsh and Peter Parker as a golden age, contrasting it favourably with today.
"While he makes some good points in relation to efficiency and the loss of engineering expertise since 1997, he otherwise recalls an entirely different British Rail to the one I knew.
"I remember customer service, restrictive practices and unreliability that were a national pantomime, not to mention the relentless campaign by British Rail itself for major line closures and service withdrawals long after the Beeching axe of the 1960s.
"Wolmar hails BR's marketing of its largely slow and unreliable inter-city services, but what I remember of the "Age of the Train" adverts was the hilarity that greeted their every appearance. It was this reality which made the railways prey to the great Tory ideological experiment of privatisation."
Indeed he was urging the prime minister to look at all viable options for Railtrack "including a possible return to the public sector".