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New in Paperback: âSqueeze Meâ and âThe Inequality Machineâ By Jennifer Krauss SQUEEZE ME, by Carl Hiaasen. (Black Lizard/Vintage Crime, 384 pp., $16.95.) âIf you could use some wild escapism right now, Hiaasen is your guy,â Janet Maslin wrote of this Mar-a-Lago satire whose title refers to both a python that âpromptly swallowsâ one of the presidentâs socialite friends (âas an amuse-bouche for readersâ) and the first ladyâs torrid affair with her bodyguard. The paperback edition boasts a new epilogue on the now-deposed president. DJINN PATROL ON THE PURPLE LINE, by Deepa Anappara. (Random House, 384 pp., $18.) âRich with easy joy, Anapparaâs writing announces the arrival of a literary supernova,â Lorraine Adams declared in her review of this first novel about a boy, âvivid in his humanity,â who looks for children âlostâ to their impoverished families along a fictional ....
Updated: 10:31 AM EDT March 14, 2021 MIAMI Carl Hiaasen published his last column for the Miami Herold Friday, ending a career as a columnist that stretched for more than three decades. In his final column, Hiaasen noted the importance of journalism, specifically local newspapers, for their role in providing a voice for their communities. Hiaasen also looked back at his many years of being a columnist for the Herald, where he developed his trademark stinging satirical form of journalism complete with both wit and wacky humor. Hiaasen, an alum of the University of Florida, began working for the Miami Herald in 1976 as a city desk reporter before becoming a columnist in 1985. ....
Big Girl Small Town with the best synopsis ever – “ Milkman meets Derry Girls. A cracking read’ – which is proudly emblazoned on the Irish version of the cover. Majella is one of those outliers – ignored by most people, and reasonably content to potter on with her life. She lives with her alcoholic mother, works in the local chipper, and obsesses over the lives of Bobby, Sue Ellen, and Pam in her wall-to-wall Dallas reruns. She keeps herself to herself, has no friends and no boyfriend, and she thinks her life is the better for it. But when her grandmother dies and the will reveals a couple of surprises, Majella soon finds that she is the object of everyone’s curiosity. Initially, she hates the attention, but she soon realises that maybe she can change her life for the better. Reminiscent of Roddy Doyle’s dialogue-driven work, this is a really fantastic debut novel from an author we’ll definitely be watching out for. ....
by Craig Johnson We watched the entire Longmire series last year and this is a Longmire book. I always wondered why most Longmire episodes on TV took place in the summer in Wyoming. In this story, Walt deals with a harsh Wyoming blizzard as he unravels an interesting mystery.
by Don Winslow I discovered Winslow on the New Books shelf at the library. Liked it so much, I read three of his books in rapid succession. Could be that the stories all take place in Southern California, near where I grew up. This is a book of six short novellas. ....
“The mind, once stretched by a new idea, never returns to its original dimensions.” -Ralph Waldo Emerson Carl Hiaasen is at his best here, lamenting the loss of the South Florida environment he has always held so dear. Given the political landscape of the United States the recent President becomes the focus for this work. Palm Beach is awash with fabulously wealthy charity balls and the sycophants are out in force. The President, or Mastodon as he is known here, is of course the focus of many of them. Hiaasen does not do a good job of curbing his disgust both for POTUS and for the way the U.S. is handling the COVID-19 crisis. His legendary comic mind is let loose with few restraints. Angie Armstrong comes boldly on the scene speaking for reason and environmental protection. The author exploits her, the First Lady and a myriad of others who he pulls into a rollicking laugh fest of disdain for power and a lament for the Nation. ....