Big trouble

Hardcover, 255 pages

English language

Published Oct. 30, 1999 by Putnam.

ISBN:
978-0-399-14567-4
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3 stars (12 reviews)

A slapstick thriller set in Florida, featuring oddball characters. They include a homeless man who lives in a tree, a student with a squirt gun playing a game called Killer, a couple of real killers, and a terrorist with a nuclear bomb in a suitcase.

24 editions

reviewed Big Trouble by Dave Barry

Not bad ... but not Carl Hiaasen

2 stars

There seems to be a genre of crime literature set against the background of Florida with emphasis on the colourful of its inhabitants, the creatures that dwell there and the destruction of their habitat. The heroes are generally amateurs with professional law enforcement only playing secondary roles.

I've always suspected that Carl Hiaasen is largely responsible for this genre with his excellent novels, many of which I own.

Dave Barry, who is an excellent column writer (search the Web for 'dave barry Roger and Elaine' for a classic example), pays respect to Hiassen in his introduction and it's very obvious why when you read this book as it relies heavily on Hiassen's formula. And it's ... OK ... but in truth it's not of the same quality, or indeed Les Standiford who Barry also gives a nod to in his introduction.

Not that there's anything that wrong with it. It's …

Review of 'Big trouble' on 'Storygraph'

3 stars

I could have finished this in about 2 hours. Really just a great humorous fluff piece to read when the winter blahs are getting you down. Also, perhaps one of the most faithful movie adaptations I've ever come across. By which I mean reading the book felt like I was reading the screenplay. It was very odd.

Subjects

  • Advertising executives -- Fiction
  • Coconut Grove (Miami, Fla.) -- Fiction