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Set in south London, Making It Rain is a satirical dissection of office life and politics. We've all been there - workplaces made dysfunctional by inflated egos and competing ambitions - not to mention petty jealousies, imprudent liaisons, bullying and harassment. We may have variously enjoyed, ridiculed, challenged, lamented or simply endured the resulting disruption. Now, Making It Rain lifts the lid on some of our more squalid transgressions and spills the all-too-familiar beans with frankness and wit. Compounded by sexual tensions, the many threads within this intricate narrative start to…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Set in south London, Making It Rain is a satirical dissection of office life and politics. We've all been there - workplaces made dysfunctional by inflated egos and competing ambitions - not to mention petty jealousies, imprudent liaisons, bullying and harassment. We may have variously enjoyed, ridiculed, challenged, lamented or simply endured the resulting disruption. Now, Making It Rain lifts the lid on some of our more squalid transgressions and spills the all-too-familiar beans with frankness and wit. Compounded by sexual tensions, the many threads within this intricate narrative start to unravel when Hannah exposes a very basic error in a prestige-project supposedly managed by her bosses. No one is very surprised when the messenger is blamed for her message… As the story unfolds, almost everyone proves vulnerable and strangely flawed… Deeply personal scores accumulate and wait to be settled… And will it ever stop raining?
Autorenporträt
David Armstrong wrote his first poem as a teenager, for personal satisfaction, but like so many young writers, he ended up putting his writing on the back burner until much later in life. Having recently retired from Ontario Hydro after forty-four years, he has been enjoying the opportunity to revisit past interests, like writing poetry, motorbiking, wildlife, fostering dogs, and taking care of the world's largest perpetually full bird feeder/bees nest, which is in his own backyard. David's wife passed away in 2003 after a long battle with cancer, but he enjoys spending time with his two children and five grandchildren, and looks forward to meeting his first great-grandchild, who is on the way. David lives in Scarborough, Ontario with his foster dogs....