From roller rinks and record players to coin-operated condom dispensers and small-town mobsters, Till the Wheels Fall Off is a novel about an unconventional childhood among the pleasures and privations of the pre-digital era. It’s the late 1980s, and Matthew Carnap is awake most nights, afflicted by a potent combination of insomnia and undiagnosed ADHD. Sometimes he gazes out his bedroom window into the dark; sometimes he wanders the streets of his small southern Minnesota town. But more often than not, he crosses the hall into his stepfather Russ’s roller rink to spend the sleepless hours lost in music. Russ’s record collection is as eclectic as it is extensive, and he and Matthew bond over discovering new tunes and spinning perfect skate mixes. Then Matthew’s mother divorces Russ; they move; the roller rink closes; the twenty-first century arrives. Years later, an isolated, restless Matthew moves back to his hometown. From an unusual apartment in the pressbox of the high school football stadium, he searches his memories, looking for something that might reconnect him with Russ. With humor and empathy, Brad Zellar (House of Coates) returns with a discursive, lo-fi novel about rural Midwestern life, nostalgia, neurodiversity, masculinity, and family—with a built-in soundtrack.
Publisher's description: "In House of Coates, writer Brad Zellar pieces together the story of legendary recluse Lester B. Morrison. Working from a handful of encounters and contradictory conversations, a sketchy paper trail and often confounding interviews with individuals who may or may not have been associates of Morrison - including Morrisons former collaborator Alec Soth - Zellar attempts to reconstruct one episode from Morrison s decidedly episodic life. In the winter of 2011 Zellar finally crossed paths with his evasive subject and was with Morrison s permission granted access to the results of an MMPI - Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory - test that Morrison submitted to in August of 2009 along with the administrating psychiatrists copious notes. Finally in late December of last year Zellar received in the mail a duct taped shoebox marked PERISHABLE containing almost two hundred photographs that Morrison termed disposable documents of the approximate period in question
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