Mars’ tale centers on three San Franciscans at the ends of their tethers: Alice Bailey Crowley, a 60-year-old cabdriver with failing eyesight who lives in a camp for unhoused people; Khozzmkk Emcee, a Punjabi Mexican American Lyft driver and aspiring rapper; and RL Sims, a squirrely cabdriver and Vietnam veteran who passionately hates ride-hailing services. Bailey hangs herself after she’s told that her granddaughter has drowned, and Khozzmkk and RL both perish in a road-rage incident that ends in gunfire; the trio’s etheric bodies go to Circus Mind, a magical role-playing video game produced by Over Soul, Inc. It’s essentially the afterlife, drawing on elements of Hindu and Buddhist belief. There, the three endure hellish illusions, get counsel from a spirit guide called the Duke of Joe, and learn that they’re but three different facets of a single higher-dimensional being. Khozzmkk and RL get reincarnated—by a gizmo called the Great Karmonic Accelerator—in late-19th-century New York, and the narrative follows Khozzmkk’s adventures as a Black cabdriver who frequently faces racist affronts but raps exuberantly to his passengers, who include modernist poet Ezra Pound. The stakes of their new lives are high: Unless RL and Khozzmkk work off the bad karma from previous existences, they and Bailey, who’s still in Circus Mind, could be reincarnated as bacteria. Mars’ yarn unusually combines hip-hop–flavored realism with colorful fantasy and Eastern spiritual themes of empathy and self-restraint. He’s a talented writer whose prose is punchy and evocative...The fantasy sections, in particular, are wildly inventive, with the sardonic, surreal quality of a William S. Burroughs hallucination... —Kirkus Review
M.C. Mars is the author of DON'T TAKE ME THE LONG WAY, his memoir of driving a cab at night in San Francisco for twenty- four years. In 2012, he released his second book, BURNER. He’s also a rapper with three albums to his credit, and hip-hop roots that go all the way back to the late 70s. He lives in San Francisco, where he continues to perfect his free- style, and his spaghetti sauce.