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OverviewWendy was at a crossroads, but the next chapter of her adventures sees her leave Montreal and head west to Vancouver, then to Toronto, and finally to Los Angeles. Filled with sardonic wit and ample realness, Wendy has her eyes set on the art world and she's out for revenge. Walter Scott is an artist from Montreal, Quebec. His work has been exhibited across Canada and Wendy has been serialized on Random House Canada's literary digital magazine Hazlitt. The eponymous first volume of Wendy was released in 2014 and was nominated for the Ignatz Award for Outstanding Graphic Novel. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Walter ScottPublisher: Koyama Press Imprint: Koyama Press Dimensions: Width: 16.60cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.539kg ISBN: 9781927668351ISBN 10: 1927668352 Pages: 256 Publication Date: 01 December 2016 Recommended Age: From 13 years Audience: General/trade , General , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsMore soulful and more true than 99% of all the art you ve ever seen or made, Wendy is THE chronicle of our vainglorious age. She s our Sentimental Education, our Emma Bovary, our shitfaced Mary Tyler Moore. I want her on billboards, on prime time TV, I want her everywhere, like a Simpsons for the international and wretchedly sophisticated new normal. Ariana Reines, author of Mercury The unique offspring of Matt Groening, Ad Reinhardt, and Alison Bechdel, Walter Scott s Wendy is one of the most heartbreakingly astute commentaries on the vagaries and pretensions of contemporary art (and all the wonderful weirdos one can make-out with there). Wendy is one of the most important characters in a genre Scott is helping to invent. I am a total and sincere fan. Andrew Berardini, Correspondent for Artforum A fantastic collection of nervous breaks and silly putty facial expressions. Michael DeForge, author of Dressing, the Lose series, and more Wendy is a triumph of bitchiness. She s the Bridget Jones of art hags. Anyone who dares to look into her hilarious Edvard Munch eyeholes will see themselves reflected back. Lisa Hanawalt, author of My Dirty Dumb Eyes Praise for Wendy Scott takes a snarky scene report, and subtly shades it into an affecting character study how s that for art? Sean Rogers, The Globe and Mail Walter Scott s Wendy comics present a sort-of field guide to Millennial scenesters. Hillary Brown, Paste The specifics, and the way they re gently derided, will likely be comforting to anyone under-employed and under-30 trying to make it in the arts in Canada, but its author, Walter Scott, makes Wendy s journey to figure out her place in the world relatable enough for anyone who s ever had to do the sameso basically, everyone. Whitney Mallett, The National Post Part satire, part gleeful revel in his character's antics, Wendy is a gradually more complex look at the art world today and its expectations on artists, but also a comment on navigating the work/play quota and life itself. Zainab Akhtar, Publishers Weekly With <i>Wendy s Revenge, </i>Scott captures without mercy the foibles, pretensions, and gross misjudgments of his millennial cast, while never losing his grasp of their humanity or their believability. It s a wonderfully funny series, simultaneously caustic and heartfelt. Rob Kirby, <i>The Comics Journal</i> More soulful and more true than 99% of all the art you ve ever seen or made, Wendy is THE chronicle of our vainglorious age. She s our <i>Sentimental Education</i>, our Emma Bovary, our shitfaced Mary Tyler Moore. I want her on billboards, on prime time TV, I want her everywhere, like a Simpsons for the international and wretchedly sophisticated new normal. Ariana Reines, author of <i>Mercury</i> The unique offspring of Matt Groening, Ad Reinhardt, and Alison Bechdel, Walter Scott s <i>Wendy</i> is one of the most heartbreakingly astute commentaries on the vagaries and pretensions of contemporary art (and all the wonderful weirdos one can make-out with there). Wendy is one of the most important characters in a genre Scott is helping to invent. I am a total and sincere fan. Andrew Berardini, Correspondent for <i>Artforum</i> A fantastic collection of nervous breaks and silly putty facial expressions. Michael DeForge, author of <i>Dressing</i>, the <i>Lose</i> series, and more Wendy is a triumph of bitchiness. She s the Bridget Jones of art hags. Anyone who dares to look into her hilarious Edvard Munch eyeholes will see themselves reflected back. Lisa Hanawalt, author of <i>My Dirty Dumb Eyes</i> <b>Praise for <i>Wendy</i></b> Scott takes a snarky scene report, and subtly shades it into an affecting character study how s that for art? Sean Rogers, <i>The Globe and Mail</i> Walter Scott s<i>Wendy</i>comics present a sort-of field guide to Millennial scenesters. Hillary Brown, <i>Paste</i> The specifics, and the way they re gently derided, will likely be comforting to anyone under-employed and under-30 trying to make it in the arts in Canada, but its author, Walter Scott, makes Wendy s journey to figure out her place in the world relatable enough for anyone who s ever had to do the sameso basically, everyone. Whitney Mallett, <i>The National Post</i> Part satire, part gleeful revel in his character's antics, <i>Wendy</i>is a gradually more complex look at the art world today and its expectations on artists, but also a comment on navigating the work/play quota and life itself. Zainab Akhtar, <i>Publishers Weekly</i> Author Information"Walter Scott is an artist from Montreal, QC. His work has been exhibited across Canada and ""Wendy"" has been serialized on Random House Canada s literary digital magazine ""Hazlitt."" The eponymous first volume of Wendy was released in 2014 and was nominated for the Ignatz Award for Outstanding Graphic Novel.""" 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