
Published by St. Martin's Press on July 15, 2014
The Spark and the Drive is a tribute to cars and to the mechanics who  serve them. "Automobiles were like a great species among us, more vital  and abiding than most people in our lives, yet only a handful of us  fully understood their complicated language." It is also a book about  damaged people who are trying to change their lives, or trying to change  the lives of people they care about, sometimes doing more harm than  good.
Justin is 17, living in Waterbury, Connecticut. He has  spent the summer of 1986 working for the legendary Nick Campbell, who  specializes in restoring, repairing, and improving muscle cars. A  properly tuned engine provides Justin with the order and predictability  that is missing from his life. A mechanic, to Justin, represents "the  pure masculine blend of strength and intelligence." Justin would rather  prove himself with grease and sweat than with a college degree. He works  alongside Bobby Stango, a biker who is on parole and committed to  sobriety despite spending most of his nonworking hours in biker bars.  But repairing new cars requires diagnostic computers, not just wrenches,  and the days of Nick's muscle car specialty shop may be numbered.
Justin  all but worships Nick, but Nick has apparently lost his focus,  forgetting simple steps (like tightening drain plugs) that lead to  further repairs and unhappy customers. He's also messing up his  relationship with his wife, Mary Ann, a relationship that has been rocky  since the loss of their child. While Nick exemplifies the strong,  silent male, his silence (a product of not knowing what to say unless  he's talking about cars) is killing his marriage.
The novel's  drama comes from three sources. The complex relationships between Mary  Ann, Nick, and Justin is one. The second is a Corvette that a woman from  Miami leaves with Nick before she disappears under suspicious  circumstances. And the third is whether Nick's shop will survive. Nick  hires a mechanic who understands computers in an effort to maintain the  shop's relevance but the mechanic alienates Bobby while violating  Justin's sense of who a mechanic should be. The man is arrogant and  self-important, traits that speak to the "unmanly quality of his  character."
For a book steeped in drag racing and motor oil, the  prose is astonishingly strong. This is a well told story, dramatic  without becoming melodramatic, populated with realistic characters  created in grimy detail.
Car engines, the story tells us, might have become more efficient with the help of computers, but they represent stability because their fundamental elements -- fuel and air and spark -- never change. Perhaps people who love engines take comfort in that stability. People are always changing, often in unpredictable ways, and no shop manual tells us how to restore them when they lose their spark. As with engines, some people are worn out, seemingly beyond restoration. Yet as with engines, with patience and perseverance -- and the help of someone who cares -- even the worst damage can be repaired, although not always by means we might predict or desire. Perhaps we cannot be rebuilt -- damage changes us in fundamental ways -- but we can learn to function again. All of that is reflected in The Spark and the Drive, a book that readers (like me) who don't know a gasket from an O-ring can appreciate.
RECOMMENDED