Literature
- Jean-Marc Dupuy, Jean Buchmann, Bernard Mayer: L'encyclopédie des Chemins de Fer d'Alsace Lorraine, Loco revue, Paris 1998, ISBN 2-903651-29-9
- Lothar Spielhoff: Dampflokomotiven – Bahnen in Elsaß-Lothringen, Alba, Düsseldorf 1991, ISBN 3-87094-142-1
- Wolfgang Valtin: Deutsches Lok-Archiv: Verzeichnis aller Lokomotiven und Triebwagen Band 1 – Nummerierungssysteme, transpress, Berlin 1992, ISBN 3-344-70739-6
- Wolfgang Valtin: Deutsches Lok-Archiv: Verzeichnis aller Lokomotiven und Triebwagen Band 2 – Dampflokomotiven und Dampftriebwagen, transpress, Berlin 1992, ISBN 3-344-70740-X
- Verein Mitteleuropäischer Eisenbahnverwaltungen (Hrsg.): Die Entwicklung der Lokomotive im Gebiete des Vereins Mitteleuropäischer Eisenbahnverwaltungen II. Band 1880–1920, Oldenbourg, München und Berlin 1937
Read more about this topic: List Of Alsace-Lorraine Locomotives
Famous quotes containing the word literature:
“Most literature on the culture of adolescence focuses on peer pressure as a negative force. Warnings about the wrong crowd read like tornado alerts in parent manuals. . . . It is a relative term that means different things in different places. In Fort Wayne, for example, the wrong crowd meant hanging out with liberal Democrats. In Connecticut, it meant kids who werent planning to get a Ph.D. from Yale.”
—Mary Kay Blakely (20th century)
“The cinema is not an art which films life: the cinema is something between art and life. Unlike painting and literature, the cinema both gives to life and takes from it, and I try to render this concept in my films. Literature and painting both exist as art from the very start; the cinema doesnt.”
—Jean-Luc Godard (b. 1930)
“Lifes so ordinary that literature has to deal with the exceptional. Exceptional talent, power, social position, wealth.... Drama begins where theres freedom of choice. And freedom of choice begins when social or psychological conditions are exceptional. Thats why the inhabitants of imaginative literature have always been recruited from the pages of Whos Who.”
—Aldous Huxley (18941963)