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Book cover of Moody Food
Canadian Fiction, Body, Mind & Health - Fiction, Literary Styles & Movements - Fiction, Arts & Entertainment - Fiction, Character Types - Fiction

Moody Food

by Ray Robertson
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Overview

From critically acclaimed novelist Ray Robertson comes the rollicking Great Gatsby of the 60s --
a sex, drugs, and rock’n’roll-suffused modern tragedy.

For Bill Hansen, things couldn’t be better. He’s got a beautiful folk-singer girlfriend, a job at Toronto’s coolest bookstore and, most of all, he’s got Yorkville, which in 1966 is nothing short of paradise for a boy from the suburbs.

And then Bill meets the charismatic Thomas Graham, who draws Bill into an obsessive quest to create what he calls “Interstellar North American Music.” Augmented by Bill’s girlfriend, Christine, and Slippery Bannister, a one-time Nashville session man and now an infamous drunk, The Duckhead Secret Society is born and launched on a whirlwind tour of bars, taverns and dives across America.

In the haze of harder and harder drugs, it all starts to come undone. As Bill recounts the rise and fall of Thomas Graham and his musical vision, he simultaneously tells the story of frustrated idealism and the passing of an entire generation.

About the Author, Ray Robertson

Ray Robertson’s first novel, Home Movies, won the Alta Lynd Cooke Prize and his second novel, Heroes, received considerable acclaim. Ray is a regular reviewer and columnist for the Toronto Star and The Globe and Mail. He is also a frequent guest on CBC Radio’s “Talking Books,” CBC Newsworld’s Hot Type, and TVO’s Imprint.

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Editorials

Litkicks

real star of Moody Food is the writing, with its displays of sharp humor and deep love of music.

Book Details

Published
February 1, 2003
Publisher
Bantam Books of Canada Ltd
Pages
400
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780385659154

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