Editors Reads Verdict
Spark's most disturbing novel — a very short book that leaves a very large mark. The technique (telling you what will happen before it happens) strips away suspense to expose something more unsettling: the question of what it means to choose.
What We Loved
- The narrative technique — flash-forwards to Lise's death — is used with genuine rigour, not as a trick
- The portrait of Lise is simultaneously sympathetic and opaque — Spark refuses to explain her
- The brevity is exact: this could not be longer without losing its concentrated unsettlingness
Minor Drawbacks
- The deliberate opacity will frustrate readers who want psychological explanation
- The novel resists interpretation — meaning is present but not extractable
Key Takeaways
- → Agency can be exercised toward destruction as well as toward creation — Lise's choice, if it is a choice, is the limit case of autonomy
- → Spark's Catholic sensibility is present without being redemptive — the novel does not console
- → The technique of telling you the ending first forces a different kind of reading — attention shifts from what to why and how, which turns out to be more disturbing
| Author | Muriel Spark |
|---|---|
| Publisher | Knopf |
| Pages | 117 |
| Published | January 1, 1970 |
| Language | English |
| Genre | Literary Fiction, Thriller |
| Difficulty | Intermediate |
| Best For | Readers of literary fiction who are comfortable with deliberate opacity and short novels that do not resolve their central questions. |
The Search
Lise, a woman of indeterminate age from somewhere in northern Europe, goes on holiday to Rome. She is looking for a specific man. The novel tells us early that she will be murdered — or rather, that she will be found murdered — and then follows her through the day and night leading to that end.
What Lise is doing becomes clear gradually. She is not fleeing anything. She is not mentally ill in any diagnosable sense. She is doing something that the novel resists naming because naming it would reduce it to something smaller than it is.
The Technique
Spark’s flash-forwards are the key technical device — they remove suspense and replace it with a different quality of attention. Because you know what will happen, you watch how it happens, and who Lise is, with a specificity that suspense would prevent.
The result is one of the most unsettling novels in British fiction — 117 pages that occupy more psychological space than most novels ten times the length.
Our rating: 4.1/5 — Spark at her most disturbing — a small book that refuses to leave you.
Reading Guides
Frequently Asked Questions
What is "The Driver's Seat" about?
Lise, a woman from northern Europe, takes a holiday in Rome. She is searching for a man. What she is searching for, and why, becomes clear gradually. The novel uses a disturbing narrative technique — flash-forwards to her violent death — to create a portrait of a woman in complete control of her own annihilation.
Who should read "The Driver's Seat"?
Readers of literary fiction who are comfortable with deliberate opacity and short novels that do not resolve their central questions.
What are the key takeaways from "The Driver's Seat"?
Agency can be exercised toward destruction as well as toward creation — Lise's choice, if it is a choice, is the limit case of autonomy Spark's Catholic sensibility is present without being redemptive — the novel does not console The technique of telling you the ending first forces a different kind of reading — attention shifts from what to why and how, which turns out to be more disturbing
Is "The Driver's Seat" worth reading?
Spark's most disturbing novel — a very short book that leaves a very large mark. The technique (telling you what will happen before it happens) strips away suspense to expose something more unsettling: the question of what it means to choose.
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