Driver
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- 9,99 €
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- 9,99 €
Description de l’éditeur
A bracing novel of work, labor, and collective action, this vibrantly written debut is narrated by a man who runs a high-speed train in France—a story born out of the author’s experience as a real-life train driver.
Driver is a book about a young man from the provinces who moves to Paris and studies to become a train driver. As he learns about trains and their intricate workings, he is transported into a world in constant motion, with its own laws and codes and specialized language, its own heroes and legends and manifold dangers. Written in a style as surprising and eclectic as a night on the rails—packed with inside jokes and allusions that extend from Arthur Rimbaud to hip-hop and beyond—Driver takes us deep into the world of the train, until it becomes, like the ship in Moby-Dick, a microcosm of the world at large.
Drawing on twenty years of experience driving trains, Mattia Filice writes memorably about solitude and sleepless nights in the cab, accidents and breakdowns, but also about the lives and personalities of his fellow workers and the conversations and solidarity they share, both on the job and on the picket line, in what is a continual struggle to improve the conditions of work.
Unsentimental yet full of feeling, Driver is both an unusual and formally adventurous novel about labor and life and a stirring ode to the power of the collective.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Filice's rhythmic and searching novel, written mostly in verse, follows an aspiring poet's new life in contemporary Paris, where he moves from his provincial home to become a train driver. During his monotonous daily routine, the unnamed narrator fantasizes about an alternate life in which, instead of driving a train to a commuter station outside the city, he's "leisurely... strolling among the bookstalls on the banks of the Seine." As the narrator acclimates to the job, he mines it for material, such as his colorful depiction of fellow driver Kamal, whom he calls a Casanovist Hoover due to Kamal's reputation for picking up women along the route ("All his trains become class A explosive materials transport. I doubt he was weaned. Some say you hear Kiss songs when his train goes past the platform"). Filice enhances his descriptions of the train route's scenery and the narrator's regimented routines with lines from Apollinaire ("May these waves of bricks come crashing down/ If you were not well loved"), Kendrick Lamar ("Be humble (hol'up hol'up)/ Sit down (hol'up hol'up)"), and many other poets and musicians. It amounts to a distinctive rendering of a young man's effort to make meaning from his life.