“The House of Tomorrow,” by Peter Bognanni (Amy Einhorn Books, 368 pp.) follows Sebastien, an Iowa teenager who has grown up in a geodesic dome, firmly ensconced in the chrysalis of the eccentric thinking of his Nana, a Buckminster Fuller enthusiast. Suddenly cut loose from her influence, he finds a new world through his friendship with Jared – another of the town's misfits – and an introduction to punk rock music.