Citations:Muskoka chair


 * 1997, Sue Pike, “Widow's Weeds” in Vicki Cameron and Linda Wiken, eds., Cottage Country Killers: A Crime and Mystery Collection, Burnstown, Ontario: General Store Publishing House, ISBN 1896182534, p 37:
 * I dragged an old wooden Muskoka chair closer to where she was working.
 * 2000, Peter Unwin, Nine Bells for a Man, Toronto: Dundurn Press, ISBN 0889242941, p 221:
 * “It was Tilly that bought that old Muskoka chair for setting’ in, son, on account a my back. She done it for me!”
 * 2006, Gordon J.H. Leenders, To Be Continued . . . Volume Two, Toronto: ECW Press, ISBN 1550227203, p 194:
 * He and Ralph had been very neighbourly until Ralph witnessed Ted disciplining Muffin after she'd knocked Ted's wine glass off the arm of his Muskoka chair.
 * 2010 [2011], Steven Heighton, Every Lost Country, Toronto: Random House of Canada, ISBN 0307397408, p 179–80:
 * Two million light years off, it was the remotest thing anyone saw from the earth before the first telescope, as he'd explained once to his children, both crowding his lap in the Muskoka chair on the battered dock in the Thirty Thousand Islands.