Underwear Soup
by
Book Details
About the Book
"Stupid" Seymour Klotz was a disenfranchised young individual. After all, in science lab, he mistakenly invented a substance that glued a visiting foreign dignitary's hand to his ass. And he was persuaded to rent a suit, for an hour, to a funeral parlor that needed the garment for a naked stiff. It was evident that the "gene pool" was sufficiently the culprit. Claude, his father, who was a shop steward in a nose hair clipper factory, was riddled with dysfunctional roadblocks. For example, Claude tried to return a toy male doll that had embarassing large genitalia. Also, he paid for expensive root canal for his boss' howling dog and was charged $100 for a TV service call, where the technician needed only to plug the set into the wall outlet. Through some strange law of physics, things changed suddenly. Parlaying monies earned from selling his dirty underwear, having a unique flavor, to an enterprising caterer, turning it into underwear soup, Seymour gained great wealth. He reversed the constant advice from his parking attendant associate, Bump, who had the uncanny knack of always being wrong. His mind was eventually analyzed at the University of Pennsylvania to study how a person could alway be in error.
About the Author
Wayne Felsenfeld has always had a different take on the world. As people try to correct his ways, they begin to realize that he always gets to their place using a different route. He's quite an extraordinary individual in the unique fact that he does everything oppositely. His wife, Linda, who's a very down to earth straight thinker, never wishes to discuss her husband's ridiculous thought. Their twelve-year-old son, Keith, who Linda fears is just like his father, sandwiches her with similiar nonsense. Wayne Felsenfeld agrees that Keith is like him but much funnier.