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Old FlamesKim MoritsuguOld Flames is the latest work from Kim Moritsugu.
This is a comic and touching tale of the friendship that
grows between two women with rather different dreams; an entertaining novel
about making your own happiness.
Beth Robinson is a 40-ish public relations person turned stay-at-home mom,
who, aside from an occasional pang of mourning for her lost youth, is pretty well
content. That is, until Rachel Klein, a hip young advertising executive, moves
into the house next door. When Rachel confides in Beth her ambitious career plans
and her intention to rekindle an old flame with man-about-town Tim Donnelly, Beth
is envious. So what if Rachel can't cook, knows nothing about gardening and forgets
to take out her garbage? She has an exciting job, an attractive love-prospect,
and friends like Schuyler LaSalle, a singing stock analyst who reminds Beth of her
own long-lost aspiration to be a dancer on Broadway.
Soon, Beth realizes she must find a way to build a new flame for herself
with the old dancing spark. Rachel - between career-making moves at work - tries
to light Tim's fire without getting burned. And the garbage starts to show signs
of life ... Old Flames is a book you'll want to curl up with in a
comfortable chair (dancing optional).
`Old Flames may not have a unique plot, but in Moritsugu's hands, it
sings. Her signature writing style is light, fluid and seemingly effortless.
Like her debut novel, Looks Perfect, Old Flames initially seems
a little frivolous, yet it has wisdom. Moritsugu helps us face our own foibles
by gently mocking them, like those internal arguments when we recognize we're about
to do something follish, but experience and wisdom don't necessarily stop us.' `Moritsugu ... is the Tom Wolfe of mid-town Toronto. With spot-on accuracy she
captures the mores and motions of life in a middle class neighbourhood, creating a
sharply comic yet affectionate picture.' `What seems like delicious confection is actually very weighty stuff. Kim
Moritsugu writes about our lives; she uncovers the small defeats and triumphs
and makes them rattle the stars.' |
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Kim Moritsugu was born in Toronto, where she now lives with her husband and two sons. She holds BA and MBA degrees from the University of Toronto, and worked for several years in a corporate setting before turning to the writing of fiction. She has taken hundreds of dance classes in her lifetime, and sometimes teaches hip-hop dance to children. She has written for CBC Radio, the Toronto Star, The Globe & Mail, and other publications. Moritsugu's first novel, Looks Perfect (Goose Lane Editions, 1996),
was shortlisted for the City of Toronto Book Award.
Books in Canada called it `highly entertaining - a romantic comedy with an edge'
and the Toronto Star found its lead character `one of the most appealing
heroines in current Canadian fiction'.
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The Porcupine's Quill is remarkable in Canadian publishing in that most of the physical production
of our books is completed in-house at the shop on the Main Street of Erin Village.
We print on a twenty-five inch Heidelberg KORD, typically onto acid-free Zephyr Antique laid.
The sheets are then folded, and sewn into signatures on a 1907 model Smyth National Book Sewing machine.