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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsThe Trump Era Has Found Its Great Satirist, and It's ... Carl Hiaasen? - Slate

After all, its Wiley who wants to scare every last tourist and retiree out of Floridaat least those he doesnt personally feed to a 17-foot crocodile named Pavlovand Keyes who tries to stop him.
Yet Skip Wiley is indisputably the star of Tourist Season. His manifestos make the front page of the paper; hes always a step ahead of Keyes; his long speeches about Floridas grimy history are delivered to us, uncut, by a columnist turned novelist who clearly agrees with every word he says, if not his propensity for homicide. Tourist Season was published in 1986, when Hiaasen himself had just moved from reporting at the Miami Herald to the columnists seat he would occupy for 35 years. I knew I wanted to write something funny that still sort of cut to the ugly part of the bone marrow, the novelistwhose new book Fever Beach is out May 13has said. He couldnt stand that, as a journalist, he could write about what was happening to his beloved Florida but he couldnt do anything about it. I dont care how dispassionate you are as a reporter, he said. Its hard not to get pissed off. The books were great therapy for that.
Nearly 40 years and 20-plus books later, what was happening to Florida is now happening to the entire country. The United States is being despoiled, corrupted, perverted, bulldozed into a playground for the wealthy. The archetype Hiaasen helped invent, the Florida Man, was once just an overconfident moron who, say, drowned while wrestling a gator for his beer. Now America is run by Florida Men.
No satirist arrived at our dystopian moment better prepared than Carl Hiaasen. The bad guys in Hiaasens books have always been dangerous and mockable. These days theyre more dangerous than ever, and an infuriated Hiaasen mocks them just as viciously as they deservepunishes them in ways that, thus far, the real world has been unable to do. At age 72, unexpectedly more relevant than hes ever been, Carl Hiaasen is on a hot streak that rivals his early career. Fever Beach is among Hiaasens best novels, because it faces the horrors of our stupid times and portrays them in all their grotesquerie.
https://slate.com/culture/2025/05/carl-hiaasen-trump-florida-man-books-bad-monkey.html
sop
(17,400 posts)'Paradise Screwed' should be required reading for all recent emigres to the state.
Easterncedar
(5,510 posts)Funny as hell and always right on target
BoRaGard
(7,591 posts)
Baitball Blogger
(51,696 posts)Paladin
(32,267 posts)I've been a fan of his work for years. Nice to have him on our side.
Submariner
(13,247 posts)I remember the matchbooks, like the comic books, had buy Florida land ads.
The favorite ads were the ones advertising "new land" where the local swamp has just been filled in.
Ocelot II
(129,019 posts)He's hilariously vicious. Guess I'd better get the latest one.
Martin68
(27,033 posts)I had forgotten how funny Double Whammy and Native Tongue are. One thing I always liked about Hiaasen's novels was his love of the natural environment and his anger at its destruction by commercial interests (sugar cane growers, amusement parks) and real estate developers. Just pre-ordered his latest: Fever Beach.
I lived on Biscayne Bay in the middle 6os, while it was still relatively unpolluted and natural, so I identify with his visceral hatred of those who have despoiled these beautiful natural environments.
Wild blueberry
(8,129 posts)Funny as hell and all the best kinds of snarky.
Try Squeeze Me, which has hilarious descriptions of Merde a Lardo inhabitants and sycophants.