The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ride-share driver navigates unfair world

- By Malcolm Forbes

Damani is a driver running on empty and veering out of control. She works day and night for an exploitati­ve rideshare app and tries to make ends meet on her low and erratic paychecks. Constantly exhausted, with little time to recharge between shifts, she is also raw with grief after the recent death of her father. At home, she cares for her sick, sad and scared mother. If there is a brighter future out there, she has yet to find it.

At the outset, and on the surface, Priya Guns’ debut seems off-puttingly bleak. In actual fact, “Your Driver Is Waiting” turns out to be a punchy pageturner imbued with dark comedy and trenchant social commentary. Sri Lankan-born Guns sets her drama in a place engulfed by civil unrest, a city — unnamed — that “thrived on the dreams of the smothered.” In contrast, Guns’ protagonis­t is named. More than that, she is fully fleshed out and emerges as a dynamic force to be reckoned with.

Damani decompress­es by hanging out at the Doo Wop club with Shereef, a mechanic by day and a fellow driver by night, and Stephanie, a teacher. At work, most of Damani’s passengers are obnoxious, but some help lighten her load by tipping well and treating her with respect. A handful — “soul-spillers, secret-blurters, conspiracy theorists gone wild” — turn her car into a mobile confession­al and take her mind off her problems by sharing their own with her.

One day, a woman gets into Damani’s car and overturns her world. Unlike Damani, Jolene is a white activist who is financiall­y propped up by her wealthy parents. Despite their difference­s, the pair click and a passionate, giddy romance develops. After a while, Damani starts to have reservatio­ns (“she was the sun. Perfect at a distance, but up close, she could hurt my skin”) but continues to follow her heart — that is, until an altercatio­n exposes true colors and unleashes chaos.

“Your Driver Is Waiting” roars to life when Damani makes her feelings known and her singular voice heard. She is a fascinatin­g creation: a woman with attitude and an agenda, who displays her vulnerabil­ity but also shows her tough side and is unafraid of using the titanium baseball bat in her trunk and the switchblad­e in her pocket. “When I go fast, I am invincible,” she tells us. Strap yourself in and enjoy the ride.

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