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Autopsy of an Engine: and Other Stories from the Cadillac Plant [Paperback]

Lolita Hernandez

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Book Description

Sep 1 2004

Autopsy of an Engine is the most surprising love story I’ve read all year. The workers in the Cadillac factory who populate this book may not be related, but in the hands of the amazing Lolita Hernandez they become one moving multicultural family. Writing with tenderness and humor she gives voice to the piston crew and the timing chain women, the foremen and the chassis line. Some of these stories just break your heart. I stayed up all night reading and for weeks afterward Abbie, who brought a ghost factory back to life, haunted my dreams. This is a passionate cry from the factory floor, a story you can’t forget from a voice that has not been heard before.”—Ruth Reichl

Full of magic and soul, these 12 stories bring to life the spirits that populated Detroit’s Clark Street Cadillac factory until its last smokestack was airlifted out in 1994. Each story is a tribute to the grit, passion and bravado that transformed Detroit into the Motor City and the Cadillac into America’s premier luxury car. They are also a heartbreaking testament to the decline of the auto industry and the loss of jobs that turned Motown inside out, creating a haunted landscape of abandoned factories and decaying boulevards.

Told from the diverse perspective of unionized assembly line workers and management, janitors and engineers, payroll clerks and retirees, these stories capture the raw and vibrant hum of humanity that found its way into every piston, spark plug and belt, even as the last Fleetwood rolled off the line, its engine purring into the Detroit night. They are about family, friendship, resilience, loyalty, and letting go, but mostly they are about the dreams and magic created in the strangest city of all—Detroit’s last Cadillac factory. In Hernandez’s stories, you will meet America—full of love, loss, pride, sweat, dreams, music, comfort food and engine oil—and, in them, you will recognize yourself.

Lolita Hernandez’s writing is greatly influenced by the rhythms and language of her Trinidad and St. Vincent ancestors, and is tempered by over 30 years as a UAW worker, 21 of them at the Cadillac Plant in Detroit. Her poetry has been widely anthologized and stories from this collection have appeared


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Product Details

  • Paperback: 180 pages
  • Publisher: Coffee House Press (Sep 1 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1566891612
  • ISBN-13: 978-1566891615
  • Product Dimensions: 22.7 x 16.1 x 1.3 cm
  • Shipping Weight: 249 g
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #1,334,856 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

From Booklist

Just as Michael Moore's documentary Roger and Me exposed the devastating effects of General Motors closing up shop in Flint, Michigan, Hernandez's short stories capture the effect on Detroit after Cadillac closed its plants there. Hernandez, who worked for Cadillac for 21 years, writes a tender tribute to the working-class people who made the auto industry thrive. The makeshift families that formed over the years in the factories are lovingly eulogized; one example is Henry, a break manager who dies on the job, and the isolated young man who breaks down thinking of the kindness Henry showed him. Each story is born of real-life blood and tears--you can hear the soothing and jangling rhythm of the machinery, smell the sweat and exhaust, and almost picture yourself on the assembly-line floor. The doors are shut and the pink layoff slips handed out, but these stories ask that we not forget those who lived, loved, breathed, and died serving the automobile, the embodiment of the American Dream. Misha Stone
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

About the Author

Lolita Hernandez, a UAW worker for over thirty years, is the author of two collections of poetry and a frequent contributor to the Detroit Metro Times. Her poetry has been widely anthologized and stories from this collection have appeared in The Iowa Review, The Michigan Quarterly Review, and Seeds, The Biannual Journal of Sisters of Color. She lives in Detroit.

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Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com: 4.8 out of 5 stars  4 reviews
8 of 9 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Th e Heart of the Matter Nov 22 2005
By Edward J. Zellner - Published on Amazon.com
Amazon Verified Purchase
Lolita Hernandez does an excellent job of capturing the feel of working in a plant. Having worked in the same place during the same period of time, the stories bring back what it was like with crystal clarity. When I heard Lolita had written this book, I was initially interested solely because I had worked at Cadillac in Detroit. I wasn't sure anyone else would be able to relate. However, Lolita's story telling gift brings everyone - familiar or not - into the heart of what it was like on Clark Street in Detroit. Although each story somehow relates to the auto industry, the relationships and life struggles depicted apply to a universally broad spectrum. Worth the time.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Inside the Soul of an Auto Plant Feb 24 2009
By Betty Deramus - Published on Amazon.com
I picked up this short story collection for purely personal reasons: one of its characters is based on my first cousin, John, who, like the book's other characters, spent years at Detroit's long-closed Cadillac Plant on Clark Street. By the time I finished Autopsy of an Engine, I felt fully acquainted with every character and with the joys and pains of a place where people defined themselves by the luxury cars they pumped out. But this book is not just an ode to that complicated organism known as an auto plant. It is about the satisfactions people can squeeze from routines and about the relationships they create through something as simple as sharinga home-made pound cake. It's also about Detroit, the city that created the very idea of what it meant to be middle class. Lolita Hernandez capturs all of these yearning pieces and shows you how they smelled and tasted and resounded.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful Short Stories Jun 10 2012
By JAScribbles - Published on Amazon.com
I picked up this book on a whim. I was so pleasantly surprised at the wonderful short stories it contained. The images were vivid, the tales were informative, and at times moving. These aren't boring essays. These are personal looks into the lives of the people who worked at the plant. My only wish is that the book had been longer and contained even more glimpses into the automotive industry at the Cadillac Plant.

Perhaps the author should consider taking one of the stories and submitting it to Amazon as a Kindle Single.

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