Read Ebook {PDF EPUB} Wigfield The Can-Do Town That Just May Not by Wigfield: The Can-Do Town That Just May Not by Amy Sedaris, Paul Dinello, . I think people’s first impression of Wigfield is that it is just a chain of porno shops, strip clubs, and used auto parts yards. Well, it’s a lot more than that. It’s Pornographers and Strippers and People Who Sell Used Auto parts. ​ Cinnamon (Stripper and Resident of Wigfield), Wigfield: The Can- Do Town That Just May Not. If Amy Sedaris is better known as the sister of public radio superstar David, it’s her own fault. For someone so fabulously talented, she is also remarkably anonymous. It’s likely you’ve seen her — not so likely you knew who she was. She’s done theatre (off-broadway, limited run, forget about a ticket) and a critically acclaimed TV stint ( ). She flits in and out of the big screen ( Maid in Manhattan ) and small (Finch’s lookalike girlfriend in “Just Shoot Me”) and if you live in New York, you might have eaten one of her muffins. Yes, muffins. It’s a constant in her bios and not just an attention-getting celebrity trick. She bakes and sells muffins — for $1 a piece. A friend of mine used her for a bridal shower she was hosting — two dozen muffins, $24 bucks — and in a story twist that can only happen in Manhattan, Sedaris apologetically warned she’d had to borrow Sarah Jessica Parker’s oven last-minute when hers blinked out. But one of the most intriguing things about Amy Sedaris is her absolute lack of vanity. A gym-toned, beauty pageant blonde, she routinely adds pimples, hairs and warts to her pretty parts, wears fatty suits around town, and gleefully contorts herself in all sorts of grody ways. She’s an enigma wrapped in a satire, wrapped in mock-irony, wrapped in a spoof. Which reminds me of her recently published book Wigfield: The Can-do Town That Almost Didn’t . Wigfield is a collaboration with her fellow Second City alumni Stephen Colbert and Paul Dinello, who seem to get unjustly footnoted in her shadow, but such is the way of name recognition. It’s a storybook for grownups complete with pictures — 20 breathtaking photos of Colbert, Dinello and Sedaris as townies, taken by Todd Oldham, the fashion designer/lensman. It’s a quirky, chock-full-of-nuts tale written by a made-up former highway-line painter named Russell Hokes. I balked at Wigfield intially. At first glance it’s gimmicky, and gimmicky — books with funny notes where the copyright goes, for instance — is so last year. But once you get past the eye roll it’s really very fun — perhaps to literature what Pringles are to potato chips — a strange little knockoff, but tasty! Wigfield opens with a long intro by Hokes – a fictitious writer, pitching a fictitious book to Hyperion, about nothing. The laughs are on hyperspeed from the get-to. For instance this bit from his newly-minted writer’s resume: Qualifications: I am a strong candidate for the position I am applying for because my words explode off the page like electric action to maximize the impact. That is how I describe my background and strengths. This section is concise, and contains action words, and should sell my most marketable skills and abilities. The Introduction is Russell’s back-story — where he explains how he went from painting highway lines to snagging big book advances overnight. But following a heated dispute with my foreman . . . I quit my job shortly after he fired me. For the first time in my life, i was truly free. But freedom has its price, which I soon found out was money. So, much like a butcher naturally becomes a surgeon, or a boxer becomes a cop, I decided to apply my knowledge of drawing long, white lines on asphalt to drawling much shorter ones with loops and curls on paper. In short, words. I became a writer! Hokes secures an advance for a story about small town America, and therein lies the rub. Wigfield has great fun at everyone’s expense. He finds his town when his car breaks down alongside a rural stretch of strip clubs and porn shops called Wigfield. A plot develops when he learns Wigfield is overshadowed by a giant dam that the state is threatening to knock down, guaranteeing imminent wetness for its residents. Working against the clock (and his dwindling advance) Hokes skitters through town collecting thoughts on dams and life from an unusual group of residents, including Cinnamon, the ecstasy-popping stripper, and town artist Julian Childs–a sultry Siegfried look-alike whose productions feature all-bunny casts. Oldham captures them beautifully in all of their creepy glory. Wigfield , arguably more souped-up Playbill than book, is a brilliant idea. Word is Hyperion wouldn’t fund a book tour, so the Second City authors took on promotion themselves and brought their story to life in what they call “more than a reading, less than a play”. These characters are dying for a stage and I suspect, though the book came first, it was inevitable given the hyperactive nature of its creators. It’s a marketing stroke of genius to marry these two formats. Buzz from the impossible-to-get-tickets-to play will fuel book sales and buzz from the book might launch the movie. In any event, if there’s one thing you should take away, it’s Hokes’ three Universal Truths: 1. Paint A Straight Line 2. Go Slow 3. Keep Plenty of Paint on the Brush. Amy Sedaris, Signed. Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. Signed. Open Books is a nonprofit social venture that provides literacy experiences for thousands of readers each year through inspiring programs and creative capitalization of books. Simple Times: Crafts for Poor People. Sedaris, Amy. Published by Grand Central Publishing, 2010. First Edition Signed. New - Hardcover Condition: New. Hardcover. Condition: New. Dust Jacket Condition: New. 1st Edition. BU-1491-G. Signed by Author(s). The Book of Liz - Acting Edition (Acting Edition for Theater Productions) David Sedaris and Amy Sedaris. Published by Dramatists Play Service, Inc., 2002. Used - Softcover Condition: Very Good. Paperback. Condition: Very Good. Signed. Signed by author David Sedaris, otherwise near fine copy. Simple Times Crafts For Poor People(Signed Copy w/BONUSES) Sedaris, Amy. Published by New York, NY 10017 / USA, U.S.A.: Hachette Book Group USA, 2010. First Edition Signed. Used - Hardcover Condition: As New. Hardcover. Condition: As New. Dust Jacket Condition: As New. 1st Edition. Insanely funny with lots of comedic photos. If you've seen any of Amy's great work you'll know what to expect. simply signed in black sharpie BONUSES: Event flyer from Borders event, Chicago Great candid photo at signing table. Signed by Author(s). Wigfield: The Can-Do Town That Just May Not (SIGNED) Sedaris, Amy; Dinello, Paul; Colbert, Stephen. Published by Hyperion, New York, NY, 2003. Used - Hardcover Condition: Very Good. Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. Dust Jacket Condition: Very Good. First Edition, First Printing. 205 pages, 8vo. SIGNED by all three authors on front endpaper: Stephen Colbert, Amy Sedaris, Paul Dinello. Jacket price unclipped. Stated First Edition; First Printing indicated by intact number line ending in the number 1. Minor shelfwear. Tightly bound, no marks. Volume is in Very Good-plus condition. Signed by Author(s). Wigfield: The Can-Do Town That Just May Not. Amy Sedaris, Paul Dinello and Stephen Colbert. Published by Hyperion Books. Used - Hardcover Condition: Near Fine. Hard Cover. Condition: Near Fine. Dust Jacket Condition: Very Good. Signed by Amy Sedaris, Paul Dinello, and Stephen Colbert on the front endpaper. This is a previous owner's gift inscription inside the front cover. The jacket has two small tears. ISBN: 0-7868-6812-0 Size: 64mo - up to 3" tall. Signed. WIGFIELD The Can-do Town that Just May Not (SIGNED) Amy Sedaris; Paul Dinello and Stephen Colbert. Published by Hyperion, N.Y., 2003. First Edition Signed. Used - Hardcover Condition: As New. Condition: As New. Dust Jacket Condition: As New. A very fine hardcover copy in a very fine jacket/brodart covered. Stated First Edition. SIGNED BY AMY SEDARIS; PAUL DINELLO AND STEPHEN COLBERT. A very nice copy in like new condition. No bumped corners to book. No tears, no chips to jacket. WIGFIELD: The Can-Do Town That Just May Not. The authors are well-known comedians. The photographer is a famous designer. The result is unlike anything the genre of humorous fiction has seen before. The book tells, sort of, the story of Wigfield, a small town that realizes it's in danger when the government wants to destroy a local dam in order to protect the local salmon population. Faced with imminent flood, the town solicits Russell Hokes, a self-centered hack journalist, who hopes to capture the undying spirit of the all-American small town. Wigfield, alas, is very far from living up to the bucolic image it intends to foster, and as the dam draws nearer to destruction, so does Wigfield's self-created myth. The plot unfolds as a series of interviews Hokes conducts with local residents, accompanied by droll, surreal photographs by Oldham. In the end, Hokes succeeds in his goal, which is, as he notes in his attached résumé, to "write a book, other than the ones that I have already written, so that I may use my words like a sword of swift justice in service of the truth, but in an easy-to-read, highly marketable way." He does so, however, not by creating a Capraesque tribute to smalltown America, but by unwittingly exposing the bumbling foolery beneath its surface. The book is one of those rare works of satire that combine creative form, uproariously funny text and a painfully sharp underpinning of social criticism. (May) Forecast: Sedaris, Dinello and Colbert have been appearing together on stage since they met at Chicago's Second City. The book will be cross- promoted with their performances (if only they were doing readings, too!), and will likely get plenty of media attention, particularly in the alternative press. Wigfield: The Can-Do Town That Just May Not. Wigfield is a small bucolic hideaway, situated in front of a massive dam which is about to be torn down by the state government to restore the salmon run. Wigfield's only hope lies in the self-righteous, self-involved 'journalist' Russell Hokes, who arrives hoping to capture the quiet dignity of the disappearing American Small Town. However, Wigfield is nether quiet nor dignified. As the date of destruction draws nearer, Hokes casts about desperate to find something about Wigfield worth documenting. WIGFIELD is a razor-sharp satire by three major talents. Wigfield: The Can-Do Town That Just May Not. Wigfield is a small bucolic hideaway, situated in front of a massive dam which is about to be torn down by the state government to restore the salmon run. Wigfield's only hope lies in the self-righteous, self-involved 'journalist' Russell Hokes, who arrives hoping to capture the quiet dignity of the disappearing American Small Town. However, Wigfield is nether quiet nor dignified. As the date of destruction draws nearer, Hokes casts about desperate to find something about Wigfield worth documenting. WIGFIELD is a razor-sharp satire by three major talents.