The Washington Post

‘Your Driver is Waiting’ hails from a classic 1970s movie

- BY JON MICHAUD

Novels have long served as source material for movies, but perhaps more aspiring novelists should start looking to classic films for inspiratio­n. A decade ago, Manuel Muñoz used the making of “Psycho” as the backdrop for his atmospheri­c “What You See in the Dark.” Last year, Dwyer Murphy cunningly relocated “Chinatown” to mid-aughts Brooklyn in “An Honest Living,” and now, in her rollicking debut, “Your Driver is Waiting,” Priya Guns turns Martin Scorsese’s “Taxi Driver” upside down and inside out. Readers are advised to buckle their seatbelts before opening these pages.

The book’s narrator and protagonis­t, Damani Krishantha­n, is, mercifully, not a traumatize­d Vietnam vet like Travis Bickle, though an inventory of the trunk of her car — “a bottle of bleach, some rope, a baseball bat” — lets us know she’s ready for just about anything. A body-building bisexual Tamil immigrant in her early 30s, Damani drives for the exploitati­ve RideShare app in an unnamed American city that is disrupted daily by protests and counterpro­tests. “So many straws have broken so many camels’ backs,” she observes. Damani is also broke. Behind on her bills and facing eviction, she is equal

parts yearning and frustratio­n. “Nine dollars an hour. I could not do this for much longer.”

When not driving, Damani pumps iron, tends to her ailing, recently widowed mother and hangs out at a gathering spot called Doo Wop, which is home base for a community of the marginaliz­ed: undocument­ed immigrants, queer people and sex workers — very much the population that Bickle longed to see washed off the streets of New York. Guns vividly captures this metropolit­an milieu in the book’s opening chapters, which roll by like a long panning shot depicting inner city life in all its complexity, inequality, squalor and joy. In place of Bernard Herrmann’s jazzy “Taxi Driver” score, I imaged these scenes taking place with rapper M.I.A.’S music thumping in the background.

Unable to afford therapy, Damani relies on her close circle of friends at Doo Wop, a handful of kind regular passengers and a vlogging Internet shrink archly named Dr. Thelma Hermin Hesse. This makeshift mental safety net feels tenuous at best, and, like most other aspects of Damani’s existence, it proves unsustaina­ble.

While out driving one night, Damani collides with the woman who will upend her life. Like Cybill Shepherd’s Betsy in the movie, Jolene Marie BarnettSmi­th is blond, beautiful and White. A social worker by day and a social justice warrior by night, she comes from money but presents herself as an ally. Damani is smitten, but there are red flags. Their first date is a fundraiser at a fancy cafe where, Damani feels, “the decor was judging me.” On their second date, Jolene equates the loss of her dog to the death of Damani’s father. Throughout the book, Guns skewers the obliviousn­ess of the privileged. Microaggre­ssions abound among the Rideshare passengers — as well as a few macroaggre­ssions.

Neverthele­ss, Damani is besotted with Jolene, and that attraction leads to delusion. “I saw how she lived with her heart before anything else,” Damani says just before they have sex for the first time. This is not the sort of mush we’ve come to expect from our fiery narrator. But the sex is great, and when Jolene suggests that they go to her family’s summer house for a week, the prospect of such luxury is almost too much for Damani to bear. Before they can depart, however, everything goes sideways when Damani introduces Jolene to her friends at Doo Wop. Jolene gets into a heated argument with them and does something that suggests her name should really be Karen.

From there the novel descends into the kind of mayhem that characteri­zes the final scenes of “Taxi Driver.” Damani even shaves her head into a Bicklehawk. I walked away from this book as if I’d survived a car crash, feeling shocked and uncertain. What just happened? Is Damani’s turn at the end an indictment of the dehumanizi­ng pressure of the gig economy or is it a narrative cop out? And what are we to make of Jolene, who remains a cipher to the finish? Each reader will have to decide whether her shallownes­s is a flaw of the novel or an accurate portrayal of the flattening power of white privilege. Either way, our driver Priya Guns deserves a big tip for taking us on such an enthrallin­g ride.

“Your Driver is Waiting” descends into the kind of mayhem that characteri­zes the final scenes of “Taxi Driver.” Damani even shaves her head into a Bickle-hawk.

 ?? ?? YOUR DRIVER IS WAITING By Priya Guns Doubleday. 320pp. $25
YOUR DRIVER IS WAITING By Priya Guns Doubleday. 320pp. $25
 ?? PAULA Berry/paula Berry ?? Priya Guns’s debut novel, “Your Driver is Waiting,” is an enthrallin­g ride that is inspired by the movie “Taxi Driver.”
PAULA Berry/paula Berry Priya Guns’s debut novel, “Your Driver is Waiting,” is an enthrallin­g ride that is inspired by the movie “Taxi Driver.”

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