In this nominally true story of an epic, transcontinental road trip,
Jean Rolin travels to Africa from darkest France, accompanying a
battered Audi to its new life as a taxi to be operated by the family of
a Congolese security guard. The ghost of Joseph Conrad haunts Rolin's
journey, as do memories of his expatriate youth in Kinshasa in the early
1960s--but no less present are W. G. Sebald and Marcel Proust, who are
the guiding lights for Rolin's sensual and digressive attack upon
history: his own as well as the world's. By turns comic, lyrical,
gruesome, and humane, The Explosion of the Radiator Hose is a
one-of-a-kind travelogue, and no less an exploration of what it means to
be human in a life of perpetual exile and migration.