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Paperback Flirting in Cars Book

ISBN: 0743268970

ISBN13: 9780743268974

Flirting in Cars

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

From Alisa Kwitney, the acclaimed author of Sex as a Second Language and The Dominant Blonde, comes a witty, romantic, and compassionate new novel about an urban working mom who leaves the city only to find her talents are no match for country life.

An accomplished journalist, Zo Goren can't drive and she doesn't cook. But that's never been a problem in Manhattan, where the streets are filled with taxis and takeout restaurants,...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Sensual and heartwarming

Free lance writer Zoe Goren embraces her inner Eva Gabor and gives up her native Manhattan for upstate New York for a year to ensure that her daughter Maya gets the best education. Of course, Zoe is a total fish out of water - she doesn't cook, she orders in; she doesn't drive, she takes public transportation. She is not really prepared for life in the country, but it soon grows on her, as does younger man Mack, a Gulf veteran with a fear of crowds and a deep attraction to the city girl. She hires Mack to drive her around but he soon coaxes her into driving lessons. Despite their different lifestyles and age gap, the two are smitten. But what'll happen to the relationship when Maya's reading improves and Zoe wants to move back to civilization? Kwitney first three novels were more comical and sensuous and with her second more serious novel, she proves that she can handle both genres. While the subject matter is more serious, she gives Zoe a sense of humor that emerges through her vulnerability, making her a more human character. In addition to dealing with Maya's dyslexia, she also has to contend with the disintegration of her own relationship with her parents who disowned her when she had a baby out of wedlock, taking on a local politician who has sold out his constituents, forging new friendships, as well as facing her own fears and phobias. I found the story to be sensual and heartwarming at the same time, relishing the relationship between mother and daughter as they both grow so much in a town they didn't realize would have such an effect on them. © Tracy Vest, September 2008

The Fun Parts of a City Girl Thrown into the Country

Alisa Kwitney's FLIRTING IN CARS--and it was a book that delivered exactly what the cover ordered--a little hope, humor, sensitivity, and of course romance. Who could ask for anything more? First and foremost the book focuses on the relationship of Zoe Goren and her daughter Maya. Because that is the reason Zoe is ripped from her favorite place of all time--the city. She's a single mom looking out for her daughter (and her daughter's education with dyslexia) so they head from middle of the city, to smack dab into the country. But not without some difficulty. And when I say difficulty, culture shock is only half of it. Zoe can't drive. Oh and wild animals? Yeah, not so friendly when they are in your house. Even if you do have a cat around. This book delivered a lot of punch for its 323 pages. I fell in love with Zoe. Her honesty, bluntness, and to-hell-with-you attitude (listen, this woman? Yeah, she knows what she wants and goes after it. No excuses made). And her daughter Maya. Well, I think every woman can identify with her self-confidence issues. I mean who likes to be 13 and not fit in? No one. Then suddenly you find yourself fitting in somewhere... well it can only be called sweetness. And this is where the book thrives. Mother/daughter relationships. Parenting, and how we make some tough choices sometimes, that can hinder dreams and hopes we thought we had. It's all there, wrapped in this great relationship of a hard-working, dedicated mom and her daughter (I can only hope for so much with my daughter). But I am forgetting something. The whole Out-of-City aspect of the book! Hey, I did the opposite. I moved from the rural Upper Peninsula of Michigan and landed myself in Chicago. Sure it was the 'Burbs, but for anyone that has done that little conversion. It's city. It took me 2 years to feel comfortable roaming the skyscraper, cement clad streets on my own. Now, I'm sad to not be in the concrete regularly. Kwitney also does a good job at creating the isolation that one feels by feeling like an outsider in a small (or big) town. Everything is so unfamiliar--foreign even. And coming from a small town, her whole feelings of being the outsider? Not such a stretch. I feel like that when I go home now. Once you leave the rural... well, it's hard going back. And Zoe had never been there (or wanted to go there) in the first place. Oh--but does she have a surprise in store for her. First there is Mack (he's the romantic interest). Then there is Frances and Gretchen--also transplanted city folk--that, well, help Zoe's isolation issues. And of course a slew of other characters. They keep the country interesting and sorta sway Zoe away from her beloved city. Or at least as much as they can. And this might be my only complaint with the book. The transition. It takes a BUNCH longer than a year to realize the country/city can work for anyone, you just need to find your place. Hell, it's taken me 10 years to finally find the common ground that works f

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I read this a while ago so it's not completely fresh in my mind. That being said, I did enjoy it enough that I wanted to give it 5 stars. This is definitely one of the chick lit books out there with substance. The characters were likeable and the plot line was interesting, with just the right number of twists. I will be buying more from Kwitney.

Charming, Funny, Sexy and Heartwarming

Kwitney's latest novel had me up until 2 am turning pages as fast as I could. Her charm works not because we don't know who's going to wind up with one another, but because we want to see how they'll deal with the inevitable ups and downs and culture clashing. Flirting in Cars features Zoe, a Manhattan-based single mom and journalist and Mack, an EMT and driving instructor just back from Iraq, living in his country hometown in upstate New York. Their worlds collide when she has to hire him to drive her around town because she never learned to drive, her dependency awkward and unwelcome from a woman used to being the master of her domain. She feels like she's sacrificing her former cosmopolitan life for her daughter, and Kwitney quickly shows just how lonely, and gossipy small town life can be. Interspersed with the story are op-ed pieces Zoe writes for a city paper back home which further juxtapose her sense of reluctance to leave it behind. Zoe eventually agrees to take driving lessons from sexy Mack, even though she still has her misgivings about the process. Once they start flirting, then dating, both of them have to deal with their own stereotypes and intimacy issues, along with expectations for the future. Kwitney paints Mack equally as well as someone in conflict between how he's thought of by those around him, and who he is and aspires to be, as a man torn between the world he left in Iraq and his home. Zoe opens up new intellectual worlds to him, but also reminds him that they are very different and wonders whether they can bridge the gap. An environmental issue in the town draws them and their neighbors into action, while they both get to know each other and spar with each other. There are misunderstandings but also plenty of tender moments, and Zoe has to learn to let go of some of her rigid worldviews, especially about what the country offers versus the city. Mack also has to adjust, even as he feels at odds with those around him who he's known his whole life, fenced in by the changes inside him. There were a few story lines I'd have liked to hear more about; Mack's friend in Iraq who died and their closeness, and Zoe's estrangement from her family. All in all, though, Kwitney again does a fabulous job of imbuing her characters with chutzpah, warmth, and complexity. There's a family argument that's delightful if only to watch the curmudgeonly brother-in-law make a fool of himself. And Zoe's tenderness toward her daughter and her and Mack's sense of family, along with each of them realizing that their relationship is about a lot more than sex, make this book a delight. Charming, funny, sexy, and heartwarming all in one. I was originally intrigued by the story line because I myself live in Manhattan and haven't driven in many, many years after a car accident, and Kwitney handles that part of the plot quite well, but there's a lot more here than just a woman who's afraid of cars, and she does Zoe and all her fears, as well as her feisti

Book Review

I just read Alisa Kwitney's latest book, "Flirting in Cars," and I couldn't put it down -- until I had to because I'd finished it. It's a funny and insightful look at relationships between city and country people, men and women, and parents and children. It's a romantic comedy grounded in the reality of country living. The characters are interesting and convincing, perhaps because unlike most in this genre, the author shows them working and parenting, not just flirting. There's a lot of flirting and more too, of course, but the real fun of the book is in the dialogue. Kwitney, like Austen, has the gift of revealing characters (their weaknesses, their aspirations) through conversations. She has a keen but empathetic eye, whether it be looking at two vets bonding over fixing a car or a gaggle of mothers at a private school cocktail party. Highly recommended to distract you from whatever chores you ought to be attending to instead.
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