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Vendor
Fritz Agency
Christian Dittus
Original language
English

TILL THE WHEELS FALL OFF

Brad Zellar

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.

Brad Zellar has worked as a writer and editor for daily and weekly newspapers, as well as for regional and national magazines. A former senior editor at City Pages, The Rake, and Utne Reader, Zellar is also the author of Suburban World: The Norling Photos, Conductors of the Moving World, House of Coates, and Driftless. He has frequently collaborated with the photographer Alec Soth, and together they produced seven editions of The LBM Dispatch, chronicling American community life in the twenty-first century. Zellar's work has been featured in the New York Times Magazine, The Believer, Paris Review, Vice, Guernica, Aperture, and Russian Esquire. He spent fifteen years working in bookstores and was a co-owner of Rag & Bone Books in Minneapolis.
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Published 2022-07-01 by Coffee House Press

Comments

“Like a more rueful, meditative High Fidelity. . . . Music, for a lonely child of late-20th-century America, becomes not merely a backdrop or soundtrack, but the thread along which one strings a life. Can a book that's languidly paced and discursive also be a joy? Yes.”

"More than a mere nostalgia trip, Brad Zellar's contemplative, quietly powerful new novel considers the tiny utopias that come from nowhere and dissipate unceremoniously in our pasts." Read more...

"...a beautiful, captivating novel of memory, connection and music." Read more...

"an affecting, introspective novel that embraces the beauty of memory and the power of resilience. (...) The writing is hypnotic and memorable. Its imagery is stunning, and its descriptions are evocative."

A Marvelous Crutch: An Interview With Brad Zellar Read more...

"Like a Gen. X Larry McMurtry, Brad Zeller takes us on a tour of forgotten America and finds truth and beauty in the least likely of places. Till the Wheels Fall Off isn't a ghost story, but it's hard to shake the feeling that you've been spending time with a ghost after reading it." — Jason Diamond “In the same way favorite songs transport us to different places and parts of our past, so too does this beautiful, beguiling book. I read it in gulps, as eager to hear the next album spinning in the skating rink as I was to see its players marvel at the unsolvable riddle of life. Zellar is a sorcerer and a saint, and the characters he sends careening around this novel are mystical and strange and set in my craw like another of those melodies from my youth. Which is to say, I'll never forget this book.” —Peter Geye “I loved Till the Wheels Fall Off! It is sure to be one of my favorites from this year. I loved all of the small-town dynamics. He captured the decline of smaller towns, but I feel like by the end it feels hopeful. The most amazing thing was how Zellar wrote about music and nostalgia. Not only the way a particular song makes you feel, but how it can connect you to a particular point in the past. How Matthew spent the first weeks back in Prentise after leaving, surveying all the ways that the town had changed, resonated with me. Russ is one of my favorite characters that I have read recently, absolutely original. I was lucky enough to talk to Brad at the Snow Days event. He talked about how much roller rinks meant to him growing up, and it shows in his writing. Till the Wheels Fall Off is a love letter to roller rinks, music, and growing up.” —Hunter Gillum, Beaverdale Books