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Till the Wheels Fall Off

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

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.

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    • Kirkus

      June 1, 2022
      A novel about the power of music for a misfit teen in 1980s small-town Minnesota--like a more rueful, meditative High Fidelity. It's 1999, and Matt Carnap is back in his dying hometown, living in the apartment his uncle has created for him in the press box of a disused municipal football stadium. Matt is spinning his wheels, wandering downtown to catalog its ruins and reminiscing about what he now considers his golden age--the tween years, when his mom (now dead) was married to Russ, a charming, unambitious record collector who spent his time and passion DJing in the roller rink he owned. Matt's mother was distant, even neglectful, and the marriage was never hardy, but she couldn't fail to see the value in the alliance her awkward boy, suffering from attention-deficit issues and a lifelong, horrendous case of insomnia, forged with his stepfather around rock and funk and skating. Eventually she took up with another man, a nightmarish theater and music teacher/blowhard in a nearby town, and Matt had to move with her into what seemed wretched exile. The rink closed, and Russ took up the itinerant life of the DJ who insists on naming his own tunes. In the years since, Matt's lost track of Russ, and part of the impetus for moving back is the hope of reconnection. This novel has several features that sound fatal: It's relentlessly inward (the insular Matt rarely engages with anyone), backward-looking (about 90% flashback), with minimal plot; the tone is nostalgic, even in the end a little hokey; long sections consist largely of playlists of cool music of the 1970s and '80s. And yet it's a pleasure: smart, with lots of sentence-level snap, and with much to say about the way that music--really any of life's animating pleasures and passions, but especially 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.

      COPYRIGHT(2022) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 25, 2022
      Zellar (House of Coats) spins a thoughtful meditation on the intersections of analog and digital as a 20-something man explores his family history and decaying Midwestern hometown in 1999. After high school, Matthew Carnap works for his uncles on the “Rubber Route,” which involves servicing condom machines in the region’s bars and truck stops. A briefly successful attempt to strike out on his own lands him a music writer job for an alt weekly in Minneapolis, though he grows tired of the scene’s derivative music and his own derivative writing, and nostalgic for records by the region’s classic rock and funk performers introduced to him by his stepfather Russ in the mid-’80s, back when Russ was married to his mother and running a roller rink in Matthew’s hometown of Prentice. It’s the memories of Russ, in part, that draw him back to Prentice, hoping to reconnect with Russ. Matthew also offers a glimpse of living with attention deficit disorder (“You can’t focus on any one thing, so you’re bored and frustrated all the time”). Though a dearth of dramatic scenes makes for slow going, Zellar’s lyrical descriptions of music and roller-skating are consistently effective. This affectionate and endearing trip down memory lane is sure to resonate with readers.

    • Booklist

      November 10, 2023
      This leisurely, introspective coming-of-age novel is an ode to outsiders and the things that bring them joy: in this case, music. Matt Carnap has returned to his small, decaying hometown, a place he was sure he would never see again. It's also the birthplace of his father, who died in Vietnam before Matt could meet him, and the extended family that helped raise Matt, especially when his mother suffered bouts of what was likely depression. But the homecoming is really a return to the tween years Matt spent with his stepfather, Russ. Both loners, Matt and Russ find common ground in Russ' roller rink, where Russ indulges his deep and eclectic taste in music. After Matt's mother divorced Russ, the two lost touch, and Matt hopes his return home will also mean finding Russ. Told primarily in flashbacks and acknowledging the faultiness of memory, with little in the way of plot, the novel meanders and drags at times but the writing is sharp and surprisingly cozy. Music lovers and fans of character-driven novels will get the most out of this.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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