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Welcome to Summersville is a humorous, satirical novel. Sal D' Angelo hopes to give his son, Randy, $1,500 to start college in 1972, but is broke. Though Sal lacks restaurant experience, Pearl persuades him and his family to run her luncheonette at her Catskill bungalow colony, claiming they'll profit $5,000. The soda counter and vital kitchen equipment is old and unworkable, he soon discovers. There's no air conditioning or acoustical ceiling tiles to absorb the deafening noise. Playing pinball, campers push, fight and shout. They curse when they tilt the machine or when balls land in traps…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Welcome to Summersville is a humorous, satirical novel. Sal D' Angelo hopes to give his son, Randy, $1,500 to start college in 1972, but is broke. Though Sal lacks restaurant experience, Pearl persuades him and his family to run her luncheonette at her Catskill bungalow colony, claiming they'll profit $5,000. The soda counter and vital kitchen equipment is old and unworkable, he soon discovers. There's no air conditioning or acoustical ceiling tiles to absorb the deafening noise. Playing pinball, campers push, fight and shout. They curse when they tilt the machine or when balls land in traps and they try to rewire the machines to get free games. Sal's wife touches a girl while leading her out for screaming hysterically at a misbehaving ball, and her father threatens to sue. Lounging, teens are reluctant to remove their feet from tables containing salt and sugar they pile and squirt with ketchup. Two male dogs knock over chairs while tearing after a female poodle in heat. Waiting on line for their orders, parents push one another, demand better service, and curse the family for running out of spaghetti. Girls scream when the campers flap a dead snake on the counter. So do their moms playing mahjong outside after receiving the same gift. A bully ties up the D' Angelos' youngest son inside a dilapidated bungalow. Before Sal leaves, Pearl falsely accuses him of taking home most of his stock instead of leaving it for her. Consequently, she persuades Bernie, renter of the machines, to give her Sal's share after adjusting them to provide extra free games. More curious about the obvious record take than angry, exhausted, Sal drives home instead of calling the police.