Tag Archives: Carl Hiaasen

Nature Girl by Carl Hiaasen

Who knows how it happened, but Carl Hiaasen has become my latest reliable antidote to combat the seemingly neverending succession of death and destruction horror titles I’ve been relentlessly reading either by assignment or by choice. Admittedly, many of them have been utterly amazing, but sometimes I just need to shake my head of the gore and let out a guffaw.

Hiaasen’s books for oldsters are not unlike his highly entertaining formulaic titles for younger readers – he’s definitely got the ‘don’t fix what ain’t broke’-theory perfected! His adult titles add a little more sex, a lot more cursing … and, even if they’re not particularly plausible and somewhat predictable, their goofball fun-factor keeps you giggling and laughing.

In Nature Girl, three narrative threads quickly combine for quite the rollicking romp through Florida’s Ten Thousand Islands off southwest Florida’s coast. Sammy Tigertail, a hapa Native American born Chad McQueen, buries a dead man in a river and tries to recover his ancestral roots. Honey Santana, a divorced mother who hears bad pop music in her head, cooks up a preposterous plan to teach a rude telemarketer a lesson he’ll never forget. Boyd Shreave decides to prove to his statuesque mistress – whose last adulterous lover murdered his wife for her! – that he’s not some boring distraction by buying a tacky new wardrobe and presenting her with airline tickets for a Florida vacation. Let the collisions begin …!

Crazy antics abound, including digit-amputating crabs, helicopter rescues, a talking corpse, mating lizards, and an undercover detective who manages to get shot. In between the eye-rolling, you’ll be chuckling along as one nutty adventure compounds another, disintegrating body parts and all!

Readers: Adult

Published: 2006

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Filed under ..Adult Readers, .Audio, .Fiction, Nonethnic-specific

Scat and Chomp by Carl Hiaasen

Mega-bestselling author Carl Hiaasen might write formulaic young adult titles, but he’s just so goofball funny, it’s hard to put his books down – not to mention the covers are so irresistible, too. Following the massive success of his YA debut Hoot (which also got the royal Hollywood treatment) about overzealous construction and owls, Hiaasen moved to raw sewage pollution and fishies in Flush. In Scat and Chomp, he gleefully brandishes his secrets of success – an environmental theme set in Florida, good kids in tough situations, rogue (and/or missing) parents, and some of the most inept experts you’ll ever encounter between the pages (or stuck in your ears). By the way, if you decide on iPod-ing either or both, you’ve got some ‘famous’ choices depending on your age … Ed Asner for Scat, James Van Der Beek for Chomp.

In Scat, Nick and Marta aren’t exactly the biggest fans of their biology teacher Bunny Starch, but when she goes missing during a field trip cut short by a sudden fire, the two classmates are willing to risk their safety (and maybe their sanity) to get some answers. Meanwhile, a greedy heir and his aging sidekick from Texas, have insidious plans to drill for oil in protected swamp lands, home to the endangered Florida panther. In the midst of this fast-paced adventure, Nick’s elaborate plans to become a lefty like his soldier-father who returns armless from Iraq, is one of the more worthier tissue-demanding episodes in a many a novel for any audience.

Consciously or not, through his rollicking latest, Chomp, Hiaasen seems to enjoy taking a few jabs at the deadbeat mother in Scat who deserts her husband and son to open a Parisian cheese shop – Chomp‘s fromage isn’t particularly kind to reality stars! Back in the Everglades, Wahoo Cray’s family’s financial straits send his mother to Shanghai to teach Mandarin to ex-pat executives, while he and his wild-animal wrangler father, Mickey, reluctantly agree to work on the next episode of the popular reality show, Expedition Survival! Before they even get on location, father and son unexpectedly pick up one of Wahoo’s classmates – named Tuna! yes, only Hiaasen can make this stuff up! – who clearly needs to escape her violent father. The show’s biggest goal at first seems to be keeping the dimwit star (fake name, fake accent, fake credentials) from becoming a wildlife casualty, although protecting the wildlife from the pampered personality might prove to be the greater challenge. That is, until Tuna’s drunk father shows up claiming his “flesh and blood” … real life survival indeed!

As I wait impatiently for Hiaasen’s next young adventure, I’m chuckling and guffawing through some of his adult titles: brave kids, wacky adults, blind greed, eco-saviors abound … albeit without the PG-rating. First rule of bestsellers proves true: don’t fix what ain’t broke!

Readers: Middle Grade, Young Adult

Published: 2009, 2012

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Filed under ..Middle Grade Readers, ..Young Adult Readers, .Audio, .Fiction, Nonethnic-specific