First Fiction Fridays: Oil Change at Rath’s Garage

Shari Narine’s debut novel Oil Change at Rath’s Garage (Thistledown Press) takes readers on a ride stopping in to explore everything from hook-ups to love to family dynamics and the past. 

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:Oil Change at Rath’s Garage (Thistledown Press, 2017)Who:Shari Narine is an award-winning journalist. She currently works as a freelance writer covering Indigenous issues, hockey and agriculture. She believes in variety! Shari has published a handful of short stories leading up to Oil Change at Rath’s Garage, her first full length fiction novel. She grew up in Daysland and now lives in Edmonton.Why you need to read this now:
Today’s hook-up culture draws a heavy line between love and sex, trust and power. Can that line shift? And if it does—or doesn’t—how does that influence other aspects of life? Oil Change at Rath’s Garage explores that culture and examines what happens when love tries to fight its way in. And when honest love wins out. Jack Humphreys has spent a decade dragging his two motherless sons around rural Alberta. For now, their never-ending road trip finds them calling the northern town of Delwood home. They move in down the street from the town born-and- bred Rutger family, and soon their lives intertwine in ways that will have lasting repercussions. Jack and older son Matt slide into life as they know it: Jack uses sex as a shield and Matt uses sex as an escape. It is the only way 11-year-old Ben has ever seen his father and his brother with women.
Then Matt does the unthinkable: he falls in love. But that kind of love doesn’t work in the Humphreys family. Jack knows that well, bitter and still broken from his long ago loss. And Ben is not able to accept that Matt can “do” love. For Matt, it is a struggle to show love to a girl who is more than a one night stand. He only understands the love he and his brother share and on good days, the love their father shows them. Need bleeds into desperation and in the end, it’s desperation that grips the Humphreys men and the Rutger family, pushing them to make the hard decisions.
X plus Y:Take any of Jody Picoult’s privileged families, make them economically depressed, write them in the wonderful style of Anne Tyler—but with Tyler off the happy (ending) pills—and you get the Humphreys and Rutgers, struggling through life in Oil Change at Rath’s Garage.
* * *Many thanks to Shari for telling us more about Oil Change at Rath’s Garage, and to Nicole at Thistledown for making the connection! For more great debut fiction, click here.