I probably shouldn't admit,
having set up a website in
Motor City, that I'm not much
of a Car Guy (or that I'm a
Text rather than an Image Guy,
as you've already noticed). But
it's the truth--and not only the truth, but the central point. If we go
only where natural inclinations send us, follow only our own grain,
what can we learn of the world that our impulses haven't pre-ordained?
That's how I ended up in my brother's garage building a car from a
kit. And not just any car, either; an early Lotus, one designed by
the car maker's founder, Colin Chapman, in 1957. He hoped to
create basic transportation that was sexy and responsive as well as
cheap--and boy, did he succeed! In the early 1970's Chapman decided to devote himself to motor-racing, his first love, and thus to discontinue the Seven. British
sports-car enthusiasts were aghast--above all Graham Nearn, a
Lotus dealer who sold more Sevens than anyone. He bought the
manufacturing rights to the car, and has been selling them ever
since (longer, in other words, than Lotus itself). Caterham now
sells something like 500 Sevens every year worldwide--and far more
in Japan, strangely, than in the U.S., where sales rarely exceeded
more than a score.
Other kit cars are available, of course, many much cheaper than the Caterham, but the Seven
had one matchless
characteristic--its starring role
in Patrick McGoohan's trail-blazing cult 1960's television show, "The Prisoner." (Perhaps you
remember the opening theme? I've got the sound clip somewhere...)
The ex-spy played by McGoohan is held at a dystopian "resort"
called The Village, and his one goal, throughout the series'
seventeen episodes, is to escape and return to England. A latter-day
Robinson Crusoe, he drives a car he built--as he
proclaims at one point--"with my own hands."
With his own hands: it was an
inspiring idea, to me at least. I
had the time, the inclination,
the cash: how could I resist?
Especially when it would give
me a chance to explore a
culture--the Car Guy world--I
knew little about, despite its
vast influence on the world. I could explore my personal ignorance,
expand my professional horizons, while having some unparalled,
unusual fun. And it came to pass--though the road, of course, was
much bumpier, and more disturbing, than I expected.
Click for a Roadster excerpt and a blow-up photo (81KB) of my Caterham.
One last thing. Those boxed quotations are kind of cool, no, at least the ideas within them?
Well, listen to this:
That's Ralph Waldo Emerson, in "Self-Reliance." Makes you think....