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Letters to Wendy's by Joe Wenderoth
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Letters to Wendy's

by Joe Wenderoth

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This book is full of funny poems written by some guy fixated and obsessed with wendy's and hanging out at wendy's.
  jason_chaotic | Jun 3, 2009 |
The writing totally reminds me of the prose of my friend, er ex-friend, Clint. Which may be why I'm so on the fence about Letters to Wendy's. The passages are off-the-wall and amusing, which I loved about Clint's pieces. But the story goes nowhere. There is no journey with the narrator. I'd like a conclusion. Clint's writing had conclusions. Sometimes I miss Clint. ( )
  shousers | Feb 26, 2008 |
A collection of poetry written as the author visits and eats at Wendys. Some are very disturbing, but funny. ( )
  hlselz | Feb 6, 2007 |
It’s difficult to assess this book with anything other than a description, as it’s nearly sui generis. Each page consists of entries made on a customer comment card at a Wendy’s fast-food restaurant by an unnamed character. No single entry is even a third as long as this review, and although the author is primarily a poet (this is the first in a series of cross-genre works by poets from this publisher), the diction here isn’t lyrical enough to qualify as what’s normally called prose poetry. Several comments do achieve some power, and the best of these also exhibit drollery. A sample page: “Today I walked in and they wrapped me in meat. They stitched the meat to me with empty sentences. They smeared the stitches with faces—I don’t know whose. They wrapped it all up in my voice, but this never really worked. When I spoke you could only hear the faces smeared into stitches the color of meat. So I began, without confidence, to take off my voice.â€? Themes recur, notably consumerism, pornography, and their conjunction, but there’s no plot to drive the reader through the work, nor a compulsion created by juxtaposed incident and imagery. Certainly, these elements aren’t a requirement of experimental fiction, but without them, the book often compares to the full, loitering paper cup of soda its author describes: “watery, sides melting, barely able to be handled—but there, so very very there, and simply demanding proper disposal.â€? Letters to Wendy’s retains a bit more effervescence, however. It’s obviously a product of someone who has a fascination with words. Wenderoth exults, “What a joy it is to be alive! . . . to let language have its way.â€? He goes on to add: “We hang by sentences.â€? That we do, readers and writers alike. ( )
  lucienspringer | May 18, 2006 |
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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0970367201, Paperback)

Letters to Wendy’s is an outrageous, tragic, genre-bending novel written over the course of a year on comment cards from the fast-food chain restaurant Wendy’s. Through the letters, the book traces a year in the life and thoughts of an unnamed narrator obsessed not only by Biggies and Frosties, but also by consumerism, pornography, and mortality.

(retrieved from Amazon Sat, 05 Jan 2013 18:42:08 -0500)

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Wave Books

An edition of this book was published by Wave Books.

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