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A charming and accessible collection of poems dedicated to one of the most American of inventionsâfast food. âI went back for seconds.â âDallas Crow, Rain Taxi Review of Books
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El Dorado Freddyâs may be the first book of fast-food poetry. In poems like âOlive Garden,â âCulverâs,â âPopeyeâs Louisiana Kitchen,â âCracker Barrel,â âApplebeeâs (after James Wright),â Danny Caineâowner of the Raven Book Store in Lawrence, Kansasââreviewsâ chain restaurants, bringing our attention to a slice of American life we often overlook, even though itâs everywhere. Along the way, he touches on such topics as parenting, the Midwest, politics, and the pitfalls of nostalgia. Caineâs wry, deceptively accomplished poems are paired with Tara Wrayâs color-drenched photos. The result is a literary yet goofy homage to American food and identity, set in a midwestern landscape dotted by the light of fast-food restaurantsâ glowing signs. Perfect for those readers who love both poetry and Popeyeâs.
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âCaineâs work has a tongue-firmly-planted-in-cheek appeal that is sly enough to fool the people who believe Popeyeâs chicken could be considered healthy, and funny enough to make the rest of us laugh, or groan, to ourselves. Wrayâs images in El Dorado Freddyâs are understated in their Steven Shore-esque ability to capture the essence of a meal when weâd rather not admit to, but cannot stop from embracing.â âCary Benbow, F-Stop Magazine
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El Dorado Freddyâs may be the first book of fast-food poetry. In poems like âOlive Garden,â âCulverâs,â âPopeyeâs Louisiana Kitchen,â âCracker Barrel,â âApplebeeâs (after James Wright),â Danny Caineâowner of the Raven Book Store in Lawrence, Kansasââreviewsâ chain restaurants, bringing our attention to a slice of American life we often overlook, even though itâs everywhere. Along the way, he touches on such topics as parenting, the Midwest, politics, and the pitfalls of nostalgia. Caineâs wry, deceptively accomplished poems are paired with Tara Wrayâs color-drenched photos. The result is a literary yet goofy homage to American food and identity, set in a midwestern landscape dotted by the light of fast-food restaurantsâ glowing signs. Perfect for those readers who love both poetry and Popeyeâs.
Â
âCaineâs work has a tongue-firmly-planted-in-cheek appeal that is sly enough to fool the people who believe Popeyeâs chicken could be considered healthy, and funny enough to make the rest of us laugh, or groan, to ourselves. Wrayâs images in El Dorado Freddyâs are understated in their Steven Shore-esque ability to capture the essence of a meal when weâd rather not admit to, but cannot stop from embracing.â âCary Benbow, F-Stop Magazine
Description
A charming and accessible collection of poems dedicated to one of the most American of inventionsâfast food. âI went back for seconds.â âDallas Crow, Rain Taxi Review of Books
Â
El Dorado Freddyâs may be the first book of fast-food poetry. In poems like âOlive Garden,â âCulverâs,â âPopeyeâs Louisiana Kitchen,â âCracker Barrel,â âApplebeeâs (after James Wright),â Danny Caineâowner of the Raven Book Store in Lawrence, Kansasââreviewsâ chain restaurants, bringing our attention to a slice of American life we often overlook, even though itâs everywhere. Along the way, he touches on such topics as parenting, the Midwest, politics, and the pitfalls of nostalgia. Caineâs wry, deceptively accomplished poems are paired with Tara Wrayâs color-drenched photos. The result is a literary yet goofy homage to American food and identity, set in a midwestern landscape dotted by the light of fast-food restaurantsâ glowing signs. Perfect for those readers who love both poetry and Popeyeâs.
Â
âCaineâs work has a tongue-firmly-planted-in-cheek appeal that is sly enough to fool the people who believe Popeyeâs chicken could be considered healthy, and funny enough to make the rest of us laugh, or groan, to ourselves. Wrayâs images in El Dorado Freddyâs are understated in their Steven Shore-esque ability to capture the essence of a meal when weâd rather not admit to, but cannot stop from embracing.â âCary Benbow, F-Stop Magazine
Â
El Dorado Freddyâs may be the first book of fast-food poetry. In poems like âOlive Garden,â âCulverâs,â âPopeyeâs Louisiana Kitchen,â âCracker Barrel,â âApplebeeâs (after James Wright),â Danny Caineâowner of the Raven Book Store in Lawrence, Kansasââreviewsâ chain restaurants, bringing our attention to a slice of American life we often overlook, even though itâs everywhere. Along the way, he touches on such topics as parenting, the Midwest, politics, and the pitfalls of nostalgia. Caineâs wry, deceptively accomplished poems are paired with Tara Wrayâs color-drenched photos. The result is a literary yet goofy homage to American food and identity, set in a midwestern landscape dotted by the light of fast-food restaurantsâ glowing signs. Perfect for those readers who love both poetry and Popeyeâs.
Â
âCaineâs work has a tongue-firmly-planted-in-cheek appeal that is sly enough to fool the people who believe Popeyeâs chicken could be considered healthy, and funny enough to make the rest of us laugh, or groan, to ourselves. Wrayâs images in El Dorado Freddyâs are understated in their Steven Shore-esque ability to capture the essence of a meal when weâd rather not admit to, but cannot stop from embracing.â âCary Benbow, F-Stop Magazine












