23 February 2026

Baby you can drive my car.


          According to the calendar, this post will appear on February 23rd, so maybe by then the blizzard we lived through in the Northeast in late January will be a distant memory.  But while it’s still fresh, I’m here to sing the praises of my car, which handily conveyed us throughout the worst of the storm.  It’s a 2023 Subaru Outback, with the turbo 2.4 liter engine, and I’m not being paid to say so.

Indomitable Subaru Outback

            My father was a mechanical engineer, and for him breathing was the only thing more important than his cars (family, country and school ties came after that, though I’m not sure in what order). I’m a creature of suburbia, having lived in city apartments only three and a half years out of a long life.  This means cars have also been a full extension of my being, as necessary to survival as arms and legs.   I don’t remember learning how to drive, because this was just something we did from the moment we could see above the dashboard.  Acquiring a divers license was a simple formality easily accomplished on one's sixteenth birthday.

            The world will be better off when self-driving, electric cars take over, but for some of us, car guys, something will be lost.   

            If you’re looking for relevance to a blog focused on crime writing, I’ll refer you to Lew Archer and Philip Marlowe, who spend a lot of time driving their mid-century jalopies all over California, or a great fresh talent, Shawn Cosby, whose hotrods live at the center of the action.  My main protagonist owns a 1969 Pontiac Grand Prix, an impossibly enormous and powerful hunk of Detroit Iron he drives for no other reason than it belonged to his dead father.  One of our legendary mystery writers said that a detective’s work mostly entails driving around in cars and interviewing people.  I can’t remember which one, but the conclusion is inescapable.  A lot of mysteries involve wearing out shoe leather, but the vast majority require a drivers license and the willingness to test local traffic laws.

            In life as in fiction, cars are a means to an end, but the journey can be just as important.  Odysseus had to make do with creaky ships, cowboys and knights errant had their horses, but we’re lucky these days to slip behind the wheel of a stupidly wasteful device that, appropriately powered, thrusts us back into the seat and hurtles us over macadam with heedless intent.    

1965 Chelsea Grey MGB
            A few weeks after graduating from college, a friend and I got in my '65 MG and drove from Pennsylvania to California on a circuitous route that covered about half the lower 48.  We weren’t trying to mimic Jack Kerouac, or Martin Milner and George Maharis, we just felt like doing it.  Since road trips and narratives are inextricable, this was a tidy novel of experience that defies calculation.  I recommend it for all young people, though I’d use something a little more cushy and commodious than an MGB. 

            We know rationally that cars are not living beings, but the ones of my youth were animated when christened with names.  An abbreviated list includes Alice Blue, Dudley, The Silver Goose, The Blue Max, Vinnie, Ford Maddox Ford Ford, El Clunko, Vance and Jeanne la putain. I had one of the first Accords that I named Jane Fonda the Honda, and whenever my toddler son climbed into his car seat he would say, ‘’Hi Janie!’’. 

We maintained those cars mostly ourselves, spending lots of time under the hood and chassis, on creepers with grease on our hands and drips in our eyes.  So maybe intimacy with their inner workings created a bond impossible today, cars being black-box computers on wheels only knowable to high tech diagnostics.  That’s true of my Subaru, though its

Brake job on The Silver Goose
personality still leaks through the circuitry and into my subconscious.  The basics prevail.  It’s an internal combustion vehicle with pedals and a steering wheel, and it goes where I point it and apply thrust.  And most importantly, responds to the little turns and twitches of my fingers and the instantaneous judgements of my eyes and reptilian brain. 


James Taylor said it best:


Now when I die
I don't want no coffin
Thought 'bout it all too often
Just strap me in behind the wheel
And bury me with my automobile

              

 

10 comments:

  1. My first car was a 1970 Chevy Nova that required a screwdriver to get the levers for heat and air conditioning up and down as needed, and even then provided very little of either. It went through an air filter every 2 months, I have no idea why, but I could change the air filter, and do many other little technical jobs on it, because there was not a computerized part in it. My next was as blue Buick Regal that made me feel like a millionaire, but we moved to South Dakota, and it really didn't like the winters. From then on, it's been Toyota Camrys all the way. I call them all "Baby".

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    1. You may recall that they tried to market Chevy Novas in Latin America, until someone pointed out the nova meant, no go. Which was more often than not the car's operating status.

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    2. I remember. Mine hung in for a surprisingly long time - it just ate an air filter every 2 months. Hey, if that was the required sacrifice to the Nova gods, so be it!

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  2. Melodie Campbell23 February, 2026 10:42

    Chris, I can relate! My first car was a 1972 Triumph Spitfire (this was in the early 80s). And yes, about driving tests being a mere formality. I dread the thought of self-driving cars. I don't even like cruise control! And now - I drive a Subaru as well! My 6th.

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    1. I'm terrified of the Subaru's automatic lane hugging feature. I'm getting used to the self-braking cruise control, which makes slow-going traffic on country roads a bit less irksome.

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  3. My first car was a used '63 GTO I drove to and from college in Michigan in '68 and '69. It got about ten miles to the gallon, but gas was cheap then. I now drive the Accord I got in 2004. It's rusted and dented so nobody would dream of stealing such a wreck, but the engine still purrs like a kitten.
    As for detective cars, one of my favorite writers is Robert Crais, but I've always blinked at his choice to have Elvis Cole drive a bright yellow Stingray. It's about as unobtrusive as a nuclear blast.
    And so much for the three-weeks-ago snow being gone. Gonna go out and shovel again after I post this.
    Has anyone done a post about weather in crime stories?

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    1. I spent many formative hours in my friend's contervible, cherry red '64 Goat. As to weather in mysteries, I had a Jackie Swaitkowski book set in a blizzard, like we just had. In the Hamptons. It was my answer to Elmore Leonard's prohibition about starting a book with weather.

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  4. LOL. That blizzard is just a memory, but this one is going full tilt as we speak. My first car was a bright orange 1968 old-time Volkswagen Bug semi-automatic stick shift (just googled it, and apparently it was rare and mysterious). The second was a 1988 Chevy Nova, which was actually the first Toyota Corolla assembled in California and racked up 220,000 miles before dying. My third is a 2004 Toyota Corolla, and she's still doing fine, thanks. My sleuthing 12-step triumvirate, Bruce, Jimmy, and Barbara tootle around the New York Metropolitan area when they have to in Jimmy's ancient Toyota, because I really can't tell one car from another. Usually, like me, they walk or take the subway unless they're in the Hamptons. In fact, I confess I skimmed your article.

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  5. My aunt put over 200k on her '62 Bug. She rode the clutch like crazy. My brother still drives that car. Original clutch. God knows how many miles it has on it.

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  6. The beauty of the semi-automatic was that it had a stick shift but no clutch, making it easy for a new driver but acceptable to a car-snob teacher (the first husband, long long ago). I did learn to drive a real stick shift later on.

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