L.A. Breakdown (Deluxe Edition): A Novel

Author:   Lou Mathews
Publisher:   Turner Publishing Company
Edition:   Special edition
ISBN:  

9781684429783


Pages:   288
Publication Date:   27 July 2023
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
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L.A. Breakdown (Deluxe Edition): A Novel


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Full Product Details

Author:   Lou Mathews
Publisher:   Turner Publishing Company
Imprint:   Turner Publishing Company
Edition:   Special edition
ISBN:  

9781684429783


ISBN 10:   1684429781
Pages:   288
Publication Date:   27 July 2023
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Reviews

Deftly captures the mood of mid-1960s Los Angeles and the waning days of one of its signature subcultures: drag racing . . . Like so many tales of this thoroughly mined era, L.A. Breakdown moves ineluctably toward both the loss of innocence . . . Mathews keeps the reader so firmly focused on horsepower, hand-rubbed black lacquer paint jobs and custom pinstripes that the small epiphanies that unfold here really do sneak up, as surprising and pungent as burning oil. -Los Angeles Times


In his elegiac tale of illegal street racing in the late '60s, Mathews captures the essence of working-class Los Angeles. This is the beautiful and uncompromising work of a native son, an eastside hood who knows the score. In L.A. Breakdown, Mathews offers up a love letter to doomed knuckleheads everywhere. -Jim Gavin, author of Middle Men and creator of AMC's Lodge 49 Deftly captures the mood of mid-1960s Los Angeles and the waning days of one of its signature subcultures: drag racing . . . Like so many tales of this thoroughly mined era, L.A. Breakdown moves ineluctably toward both the loss of innocence and the recruitment center: The shadow of Vietnam is, understandably, ever present. But Mathews keeps the reader so firmly focused on horsepower, hand-rubbed black lacquer paint jobs and custom pinstripes that the small epiphanies that unfold here really do sneak up, as surprising and pungent as burning oil. -Los Angeles Times (December 5, 1999) What Lou Mathews delivers here is the perfect ethnography of Los Angeles hot rod worship culture in its golden era. His people are the errant working-class knights of the stylized tournaments of street drag racing and the drive-in damsels they adore and neglect, often in about the same breath. The way they talk is dazzling-funny and heart-rending by turns-and always completely real feeling. Among his other great gifts, Mathews possesses an ear as original as Harold Pinter's or David Mamet's. -Carter Wilson, author of Crazy February and Treasures on Earth Mathews brings this world to life in vivid detail, capturing the bittersweet twilight of a subculture. -Publishers Weekly (August 16, 1999) Having grown up in the Valley myself in the fifties and sixties, remembering well the Bob's Big Boy and the Van de Kamp's, and having even cruised Van Nuys Boulevard even as I was never part of the culture Lou Mathews has caught so evocatively, I nonetheless can attest to how well he caught the feel of the landscape-the way there seemed to be big voids in the psychology of the geography, voids into which you could drive your life, sometimes to dead ends, sometimes off psychic cliffs, as Mathews' characters have done. But just as impressive to me, really, is the array of vivid characters whose destiny seems both defined and betrayed by their wheels-the juxtaposition, for instance, of Reinhard's 'fastest flathead Ford in Tulsa' with a future that just naturally seems fated for incarceration of one sort of another-as well as the developing nuances of all their relationships-Fat Charlie's parallel bonds with Donna and Connie, each trumping the other in some telling way, all while a world of upheaval seeps in around the edges and washes away all the meanings and codes of an experience shared in common for the last time. L.A. Breakdown is a very skillful and assured piece of work, moving and insightful and observant. -Steve Erickson, author of Arc d'X, The Sea Came in at Midnight, and Zeroville


Deftly captures the mood of mid-1960s Los Angeles and the waning days of one of its signature subcultures: drag racing . . . Like so many tales of this thoroughly mined era, L.A. Breakdown moves ineluctably toward both the loss of innocence and the recruitment center: The shadow of Vietnam is, understandably, ever present. But Mathews keeps the reader so firmly focused on horsepower, hand-rubbed black lacquer paint jobs and custom pinstripes that the small epiphanies that unfold here really do sneak up, as surprising and pungent as burning oil. -Los Angeles Times (December 5, 1999) What Lou Mathews delivers here is the perfect ethnography of Los Angeles hot rod worship culture in its golden era. His people are the errant working-class knights of the stylized tournaments of street drag racing and the drive-in damsels they adore and neglect, often in about the same breath. The way they talk is dazzling-funny and heart-rending by turns-and always completely real feeling. Among his other great gifts, Mathews possesses an ear as original as Harold Pinter's or David Mamet's. -Carter Wilson, author of Crazy February and Treasures on Earth Mathews brings this world to life in vivid detail, capturing the bittersweet twilight of a subculture. -Publishers Weekly (August 16, 1999)


Deftly captures the mood of mid-1960s Los Angeles and the waning days of one of its signature subcultures: drag racing . . . Like so many tales of this thoroughly mined era, L.A. Breakdown moves ineluctably toward both the loss of innocence . . . Mathews keeps the reader so firmly focused on horsepower, hand-rubbed black lacquer paint jobs and custom pinstripes that the small epiphanies that unfold here really do sneak up, as surprising and pungent as burning oil. --Los Angeles Times


Author Information

Lou Mathews lives in Los Angeles below the Hollywood sign and is a fourth generation Angeleno. Married at 19, he worked his way through UC Santa Cruz as a gas station attendant and mechanic and continued to work as a mechanic until he was 39. Since then he has worked as a freelance journalist, restaurant reviewer, and contributing editor at L.A. Style magazine. His journalism has been published in the Los Angeles Times Magazine, Tin House, Mother Jones, and many other outlets—from underground newspapers and airline magazines to corporate house organs like Bob’s Big Boy Family News. Mathews has published short stories in more than forty literary quarterlies, including the New England Review, Short Story, Witness, ZYZZYVA, and seven issues of Black Clock. The stories have been included in more than ten fiction anthologies and two textbook series. He has received a Pushcart Prize, two Pushcart Special Mentions, A Best American Mystery Stories Special Mention, A Katherine Anne Porter Prize, as well as a California Arts Commission and National Endowment for the Arts Fiction Fellowships. He has taught in the UCLA Extension Writers’ Program since 1989 and is a recipient of the UCLA Extension Teacher of the Year and Outstanding Instructor awards. L.A. Breakdown, Mathews’ first novel, was published in 1999, when he was 53, and it was picked as a Best Book of 1999 by the Los Angeles Times. His latest novel, Shaky Town, published last year, was long-listed for the 2022 Tournament-of-Books.

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