I generally like Carl Hiaason's writing. He's got a breezy style and a sharp wit. His books are good beach and airplane reads. I picked up Nature Girl at Target last month because I was in the mood for something fun to break up all the history I've been reading.
My complaint with this book is the same I have with most of Hiaason's others - there are too many characters.
This book has a good basic story - a slightly loony woman named Honey decides to take revenge on a telemarketer named Boyd who calls her during dinner and then insults her. It's a cause I can get behind, and her plan for Boyd is pretty ingenious. But then Honey's son Fry and her ex-husband Perry get dragged in. As does Boyd's mistress and his wife and the private dective Boyd's wife hires to get proof that Boyd is cheating on her. Then there's a half-Seminole Indian who calls himself Thlocko who's taking refuge in the Everglades because a man died on his airboat tour. And an FSU co-ed who becomes the Seminole's willing hostage. All these folks end up on the same island in the middle of the glades, which is just stretching belief a little too much. Oh wait, there's also Honey's lecherous ex-boss who is stalking her. And a group of religious nuts who think Boyd is the Saviour, born again and delivered from the sea.
I think Hiaason needs a new editor, one who is willing to overlook Hiaason's success and able to get him to trim a bit.
Skinny Dip is still my favorite of all his books, although this one is in the top three.
This was the first book of his I read and I felt the same way you did. I'll have to take a look at "Skinny Dip".
ReplyDeleteI saw Carl on "60 Minutes" where he said he's not really creative, he just sticks his head out the window and takes his pick of the freaky Florida citizens.