Zen and the Art of Cab driving - that may have been the working title.
Author Brain Haycock melds his experience driving a taxi in Austin, Texas with an introduction to Zen Buddhism. As I live in Austin, I was looking forward to stories about Austin. He has a couple flash backs to the ‘80s, which I found nostalgic, but that was before he drove a cab. His cab driving took place in the 2000s.
So, less nostalgia as 2005 seems like yesterday… but as he uses a lot of local details such as street, building and business names, I could easily follow his treks around town as he teaches the vocabulary and precepts of Zen; the four noble truths, Eightfold path, zazen, samadhi, paramitas.
As he relays his everyday observations of cab fares and traffic I initially thought, gee any one can babble about what they did at work today, but that is the fun of the book in that he has a pleasant conversational style, which easily blends with the Zen tutorial.
At times he falls into familiar preacher traps, that is, anyone with more than you, be it money or a nicer house or car, must be spiritually lacking, and as with any profession that is exposed constantly to the public, a cabbie vs them attitude.
Another side effect of dealing with the public is that it helps him describe the cab driving business model as one that is necessary for society and does those not always pleasant tasks of getting an apparently often cranky public to their destination. Published in 2010, it is interesting that a few years later ride-sharing - Uber and all - has about wiped out the old taxi business, karma?
‘Dharma Road’ was a quick, pleasant and informative read. It was like a drive around Austin with Buddha without the meter running !