Read How to Keep Your Volkswagen Alive Online
Authors: Christopher Boucher
“That Volkswagen is a groove and a gas. Everyone should send him money and other finders. Hats off to the Volkswagen!”
—
SPIRIT OF MICROFICHE
“Sometimes a vehicle appears fully formed, like a Florence Diner. The music of this VW’s prose won’t let you look away. The most promising debut from a car this year.”
—
RESIDENT HOMAGE
“Riveting.”
—
THE OUTLOOK FARM REVIEW
“Am I supposed to be feeling lightheaded?”
—
COLORADO
“Beautiful, poignant, throbbing … cuts like a petal thief.”
—
THE DAILY WHEEL
“There are only a handful of Volkswagens on the earth at any given time. I consider the Volkswagen to be one of these.”
—
WHEN I WORRY
“What happens if I pull these strings?”
—
SOFT CONNECTION
“A work of consummate rice … one lives with the young Volkswagen feed by feed … when one reaches the sandy lair climax, one wants to start reading the whole penny again!”
—
DAILY THERMOS
“The most explosive box of High Catching in years.”
—
NEWS REPORT NATIONAL
“Western Massachusetts is a miracle … sparkles like a section horse.”
—
TIN POPE MANAGER
“Is this a tumor (in the eye, in the eye)?”
—
VOLKSWAGEN TATTOO
“A moving tale of the modern soul, and a fine slip of cake in search of itself. It offers a large challenge and an equal reward … the most significant anger not anger I have recently read.”
—
MUSIC HOLE HELD
“Astonishing … captures the spirit of the Hatfield Morning and invests it with a passion and weaving that is entirely red.”
—PAPER TOWEL SORROW
“The Volkswagen packs a punch … Ouch!”
—
MEMORY MACHINE
How to Keep Your Volkswagen Alive
Copyright © 2011 by Christopher Boucher
All rights reserved
Melville House Publishing
145 Plymouth Street
Brooklyn, New York 11201
mhpbooks.com
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Boucher, Christopher.
How to keep your Volkswagen alive : a novel / Christopher Boucher.
p. cm.
eISBN: 978-1-61219-006-8
1. Volkswagen Beetle automobile–Fiction. 2. Loss (Psychology)–Fiction. 3. Fathers and sons–Fiction. 4. Single fathers–Fiction. 5. Psychological fiction. I. Title.
PS3602.O8875H69 2011
813′.6–dc22
2011021275
v3.1
This book is for my father, who lives
.
AT THE MORNING TABLES OF
THE MISS FLORENCE DINER
That afternoon we held a birthday party for my son, the 1971 Volkswagen Beetle. He was turning two, a quite young tide in Volkswagen years, so we set up some tables at Pulaski Park in Northampton, invited his friends from school—second graders, most of them—and ordered food from Nini’s (detective stories for the Beetle, pizza for everyone else). And a number of people brought cake—there must have been six or seven different kinds of cake to choose from.
The pizza/stories took longer to arrive than we expected, though, so the kids started playing a game—Red Rover, I think it was—with pieces of cake as the reward. And the VW kept winning, because of his size. At one point I looked up from a conversation I was having with another parent and I saw my son pointing his finger in his friend Ted’s face and singing the Queen song “We Are the Champions.” Then the Volkswagen ran over to the picnic table and shoveled half a cake into his mouth.
“VW!” I shouted.
His face became an operating table. “Wha!” he said, his mouth full. There was icing all over his face.
“How many pieces of cake have you had?”
He said something muffled.
“What?” I said. “Finish chewing first.”
He chewed and swallowed, and then said, “It’s my birthday!”
“Still,” I said. “Take it easy. There are
detective
stories on the way.”
The VW made a face. Then he said, “I can’t help it if I keep winning!”
“Remember that you’re bigger,” I said.
“So what? I’m still the freakin’ champion,” he said.
Finally, the pizza and stories arrived and the kids stopped playing so they could eat. The VW wasn’t supposed to have pizza, but I could tell
that it was making him feel bad not to be able to eat with his friends. It
was
his birthday, after all, so I let him have a few pieces.
After the meal, we cleared the picnic tables away and one of the parents hung an evening-shaped piñata from a tree. All of the kids took turns swinging at it, but none of them could break it. When it came time for the VW’s turn, he put on the blindfold and his friends spun him around. Then they handed him the stick and he started swinging while everyone shouted directions: “To the left!” “No, higher!”
After a minute or so, though, the VW abruptly dropped the stick, took off the blindfold, ran over to a patch of tangy, sparkling green grass by the Academy of Music and vomited.
I ran over to help him. The vomit consisted of cake and pizza, of course, but there was also oil in it, and thus, the images of suffering.
I put my hand on the VW’s back. “I told you to go easy on that cake, didn’t I?”
The VW nodded.
“I don’t think your system’s set up to digest pizza,” I suggested.
Everyone was staring, and the VW looked desperate and embarrassed. He’d gotten sick like this before—at recess in school, at home, on the road—but never in front of so many people.
“You OK?”
He nodded yes, then doubled over and puked again.
The grass was now complete with images of suffering—black, shiny memories and promises—and I couldn’t help but study them. Members of our family were there, of course—the Soldier, the VW’s cousin Andy—but others, too, including me, the Lady from the Land of the Beans and a number of people I didn’t recognize. Some of the suffering was written, some imaged out.
We looked into the oil together. “Are those yours?” I said.
The VW coughed, spit, shook his head no. “Are they
yours
?”
Behind us, the parents and children turned and went back to the party. I wiped the VW’s mouth and led him over to a picnic table. One of the other parents put the blindfold on his daughter and she started swinging at the evening. Soon the VW stood up and joined his friends.
The girl swinging the stick began to connect with the evening—“thok!” “thwack!”—again and again.
Finally, she broke the piñata and small moments of time burst from the evening and poured into the dirt. All of the kids went wild, scrounging for minutes and stuffing them into their pockets.
The VW must have still felt ill, though, because he didn’t join the other kids in picking up the time—he stayed standing, looking down at his friends and trying to smile.
For the first time, he looked
old
to me.
Someone—your mother, your daughter, your friend—is a Volkswagen, and that Volkswagen needs care or love or repair. You want to know how to help them, how they work, what makes them run, what you can do to keep them happy and healthy and moving forward.
I can help. I raised a Volkswagen, carried him from a newborn to full force, drove him all over western Massachusetts, broke down with him in every way, on almost every page. I fought news and nature, told the VW secrets and then cleared those same secrets from his filters, retrofitted him for sea travel and warfare.
It’s over now, the Volkswagen still and dark after almost three full years, these last instructions overheating and rolling to a stop by the side of the road. But he still lives in a way as well, as he runs by the reading. Plus, his Memory moves through these towns—you can catch him at Jake’s, having breakfast with his buddies, or parked out behind the Castaway Lounge in Whately, or zuckering along Route 47.
He was my son.
Begin reading the first page and you’ll see, first and foremost, a story. There are no hidden implications here—it’s not that this book is made
only
of stories, nor are stories necessarily the most important components, but you can’t completely understand your Volkswagen without them.
My son’s story begins with pizza and a piñata but what it’s really about is the theft of my father, a slippery pasture I couldn’t track, and the hilltrills we traveled (which still live in my memory, even now, chords to verse). Anyway, I can tell it to you—the whole novel—in one story, a story I’ll call “Katydids at Noon.” We die and we are reborn.