The Driver: My Dangerous Pursuit of Speed and Truth in the Outlaw Racing World
The Driver: My Dangerous Pursuit of Speed and Truth in the Outlaw Racing World book cover

The Driver: My Dangerous Pursuit of Speed and Truth in the Outlaw Racing World

Paperback – Illustrated, October 14, 2008

Price
$11.99
Format
Paperback
Pages
352
ISBN-13
978-0061374999
Dimensions
6 x 0.83 x 9 inches
Weight
1 pounds

Description

“...this is more than a testosterone cocktail of a memoir. It’s a joy ride...” — Los Angeles Times “…highly entertaining insider’s look at the world of high-stakes, high-octane, high-risk road rallies…. Roy writes with enthusiasm and with a novelist’s sense of pacing and character. The book is so good, so filled with color and adrenaline, that it plays out like a movie in your mind.” — Booklist (starred review) Alexander Roy has been driving in international road rallies since 2003. He finished first in the 2006 Gumball 3000 and set a new speed record from New York to Los Angeles, making the nearly 3,000-mile drive in a staggering 32 hours and 7 minutes. When he is not on the road, he lives in New York City. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. The Driver My Dangerous Pursuit of Speed and Truth in the Outlaw Racing World By Alexander Roy HarperCollins Publishers, Inc. Copyright © 2008 Alexander RoyAll right reserved. ISBN: 9780061374999 Chapter One The Divinity of Purpose December 1999 It was a gorgeous morning, heaps of snow having escaped the streets' salting in the wake of the previous night's storm, their knee-high peaks not yet capped with soot from passing cars and trucks. My cell phone rang as I descended the subway station steps at the corner of Sixth Avenue and Bleecker Street, mere seconds before I would have disappeared into the station and out of range for the next half hour. "Is this Alexander Roy?" There was only one reason for such a call. "This is Dr. Johnson at Beth Israel Hospital." The world slowed. "As your father's medical-care proxy, you must give permission for any time-critical procedure during a life-threatening or?.?.?.?Mr. Roy? Mr. Roy, can you hear me?" The bus rumbling mere feet away, the cacophony of voices echoing off the subway station's tiled walls just ahead, the deep hot rushing roar of air out of the station entrance as a train pulled in—all were muted by the gravity of events to which I could only react, and never control. "Mr. Roy?" "I'll be there in fifteen minutes." "There's no time. We need your permission to perform an emergency tracheostomy immediately." "Or else?" "Your father will die." October 1999 My father was very secretive about his past. While I was a child, the notion of my climbing up his leg to ask a question—to scale the seemingly indomitable mountain that was my father—was terrifying. My father had always described himself as a lion, and so had everyone else. He'd lost everything during the Second World War—his brother, his friends, his childhood home—and fled with his surviving family to New York City. He joined the U.S. Army at seventeen, landed at Normandy, was shot and wounded twice, and rode with the lead units into Buchenwald concentration camp. After the war he started life anew, founded the family business in 1954, met my mother in 1970, had two sons he sent to private school, bought a Cadillac, and earned (and saved) enough for us to live comfortably. Even his enemies—and these were restricted to business competitors—respected him, trading insults over the phone every week for decades. He spoke fluent French and Spanish, and conversational German, Russian, and Polish. All agreed he was a gifted painter, photographer, and pianist. My brother and I knew better than to interrupt his weekday postwork relaxation time, during which he plucked at the precious custom-made flamenco guitar he'd bought in Seville. He loved work, and intended to work until the day he died. Surrender was inconceivable. I never believed it possible that he could be withered by cancer, his deep radio-commercial-grade voice cracking from multiple surgeries and chemotherapy, lying in a hospital bed 15 minutes from where we'd lived for more than twenty years. I'd always assumed he'd live to see me married with children. That was his greatest wish. My greatest wish was for him to reveal what he'd really done between the war and his meeting my mother, a nearly twenty-five-year gap that had been left largely unexplained. My mother's curiosity went further, as the frequent business trips he'd taken when they first met had continued through the late 1970s, ending abruptly in 1980. Time was now running out. Radioactive pellets had been placed in his neck to fight a cancerous tumor, and the resultant swelling made breathing painfully difficult. The doctors recommended, and my father consented to, a tracheostomy—whereby a hole was cut in his neck and a breathing tube inserted down his throat. His body, already greatly weakened by months of treatment, reacted badly to the procedure, and I spent long nights beside his hospital bed watching him sleep under heavy sedation. The swelling persisted for weeks after the pellets were removed, and in heavy-lidded moments of near wakefulness his feet danced slowly under the sheets, both hands raised like claws. "I wonder what he's dreaming about," said the wife of the patient in the neighboring bed. "Driving," I said. Once the tube was finally removed, he began daily, mostly unconscious visits to a hyperbaric oxygen chamber intended to accelerate the closure and healing of his throat. "He won't be able to speak for some time," one doctor warned as he handed me a pad and paper, "but you can try this." My father's eyes darted wildly during his first few days of wakefulness, his hands too shaky for anything but scrawling gashes through the paper. Clarity slowly returned to his gestures, and he resumed looking me in the eyes and nodding as I asked him yes/no questions about the business I knew he missed. He struggled to push words up through his ragged, constricted throat. I stared at his mouth and raced like an auctioneer through phrases I wanted to spare him the pain of attempting to utter. He pointed at the pad and paper, wrote furiously, then turned the pad toward me. Throat Dry Air Fire "I'll get you more water," I said, bringing the straw to his mouth. He swiped it aside angrily and wrote again. Operation "The tracheostomy?" He nodded. "What about it?" Never Again Pain "You don't want to have a tracheostomy again?" Prefer Die "C'mon," I said, false optimism tugging at the corners of my mouth. "That's so unlike you." Suddenly and with vicious strength he grabbed my wrist, pulled my face to his, and whispered through quivering lips. "You?.?.?.?cannot?.?.?.?allow?.?.?.?it." "But—" I mouthed in disbelief. He glowered at me, eyes wide with volcanic anger, and pushed the pad against my chest. Prefer Die December 1999 "Mr. Roy!" Dr. Johnson blurted through the phone. "If you can hear me, I need your permission right now if we are to save your father's life." "What," I said, my eyes welling with tears even as I spoke with literally deadly clarity, "are the odds of his survival without the procedure?" " Very low. Every passing minute increases the likelihood of oxygen deprivation and brain damage, if he survives." "Do it now," I said, in tears. Continues... Excerpted from The Driver by Alexander Roy Copyright © 2008 by Alexander Roy. Excerpted by permission. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • The riveting memoir of a life lived at the right-hand edge of the speedometer.
  • Alex Roy's father, while on his deathbed, hints about the notorious, utterly illegal cross-country drive from Los Angeles to New York of the 1970s, which then inspired his young son to enter the mysterious world of underground road rallies. Tantalized by the legend of the Driver—the anonymous, possibly nonexistent organizer of the world's ultimate secret race—Roy set out to become a force to be reckoned with. At speeds approaching 200 mph, he sped from London to Morocco, from Budapest to Rome, from San Francisco to Miami, in his highly modified BMW M5, culminating in a new record for the infamous Los Angeles to New York run: 32:07.
  • Sexy, funny, and shocking,
  • The Driver
  • is a never-before-told insider's look at an unbelievably fast and dangerous society that has long been off-limits to ordinary mortals.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(266)
★★★★
25%
(111)
★★★
15%
(67)
★★
7%
(31)
-7%
(-31)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Legend In His Own Mind

Yeah, its pretty terrible. The writing is weak, and there is no arc or meat to the book. There's a lot of innuendo about some half-baked theory that his father had a secret life that starts and just disappears. The rest of the story about the run across the US and the road rallys could be (and have been) told better and more interestingly in a 4 minute youtube video. Roy takes himself way too seriously, you will not. The only people that are going to be impressed by all this nonsense is folks who don't know that much about cars, or racing, to begin with. Less hubris, more story, better writing would make this passable, but even then the best medium is probably not a book.
8 people found this helpful
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Why it has so many positive reviews I have no idea

I found this book tedious from the beginning. The writing style is hard to follow. This Alex character is very hard to like and it just keeps getting more and more difficult to read. Although I usually force myself to finish a bad book I've read almost half-way through, I just couldn't finish this one. After the incident with the Murcielago at the end of chapter 19, I literally slammed the book down in disgust. Why it has so many positive reviews I have no idea. Don't waste your time or money on this one.
5 people found this helpful
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Really Bad

This can not even being call a book! Have all the books about Gumball, etc,and a Race car driver myself.
Do not buy this , waist of your money,
3 people found this helpful
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Terrible! Check out Brock Yates' "Cannonball Run" instead

Read all of the negative reviews on Amazon. Note the attention to detail and literacy of the posters. Now, read the most recent positive reviews. Draw your own conclusions!
3 people found this helpful
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Driven to distraction

Starts out interesting but becomes less so as the book goes on and the author seems to lose interest. Lots of angst and too much dwelling on his relationship with his father, and a seeming lack of concern for the business he owns.
3 people found this helpful
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If you like real life stories of fast cars and the racing culture; get this book

Fantastic book and a total page turner. Absolutely explores all the cool parts of these cross country races and dives into the story behind legendary cannonball run.
2 people found this helpful
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Garbage.

This book and the self absorbed author are both piles of hot garbage. Roy should go back to burning through his inheritance and keep his illegal exploits to himself.
2 people found this helpful
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Wonderful surprise

This is one of my favorite books. The writing is very good and engaging, and there's a speed junkie in me that has always wanted to have nice cars and drive them quickly. I enjoyed reading this book so much (originally, borrowed from the library) that I bought one copy for my best friend and another to lend to friends who would appreciate this story. I say "story" because any car/driving junkie exaggerates a little or embellishes a bit, and I suspect the author is no different.
2 people found this helpful
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Interesting story

I was fascinated by the story. The layout of the story was innovative. The text was a fast read,not necessarily a literary masterpiece. To anyone who is interested in the Canonball Baker Sea to Shining Sea Memorial Trophy Dash, this provides a modern update.
2 people found this helpful
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Awesome!

Great read...really enjoyed it all the way through. Roy really has a way of grabbing your attention and hanging onto it. I've recommended this book to many friends.
2 people found this helpful