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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsWe're All Living in a Carl Hiaasen Novel (Amy Weiss-Meyer, The Atlantic)
Great read.
https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2025/06/carl-hiaasen-florida-fever-beach/682577/
After Squeeze Me, people started leaving angry comments on Hiaasens Amazon page. Id like a REFUND! one reviewer wrote, citing disappointment with page after page of vitriolic and vituperative character assassination of DJT. Fiction should be escape, not an in your face political hit-job, another person wrote. They felt betrayedwhy did this author they used to turn to for a good laugh insist on mocking Donald Trump?
-snip-
But at a certain point between the election of 2000, when the recount saga put Florida in the national spotlight, and the 2023 revelation that Trump was storing classified documents in a bathroom at Mar-a-Lago, something changed. You could no longer write satire about Floridas dark side the way Hiaasen always has without writing, in some way, about national politics. And when the butt of the joke is the MAGA movement itself, some readers will inevitably take it as an affront.
-snip-
Hiaasen had just gotten back from a short trip to the Caribbean. He and Katie had left the country, he said, because he simply couldnt bear to watch the inauguration from Florida. Theyd done the same thing a few months earlier for Election Day. Hiaasen described his behavior as cowardly.
Did being away help take his mind off things, at least? I asked him. I thought it would, he said. But theres no hiding. The news alerts still came through on his phone. Yet after decades of covering Florida and its politics, Hiaasen told me, you sort of condition yourself not to be apoplectic. You keep watching the circus, and you keep writing about it. Plus, he said, I do have a certain amount of faith in karma.
-snip-
Wonderful review of his new novel, Fever Beach, in the Washington Post:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/books/2025/05/01/fever-beach-carl-hiaasen-review/
Curiously, sillier writers have struck deeper, possibly because they have spent years in the absurdist world that the Very Stable Genius has rendered our reality. In July 2020, Christopher Buckleys Make Russia Great Again offered a pastiche of the first Trump White House. Just a few weeks later, Carl Hiaasen published Squeeze Me, a funny takedown of the high-society inanity swirling around Mar-a-Lago. As Washington Post reviewer Richard Lipez noted in his review, Hiaasens long career lambasting political corruption and moral grotesquerie means that the Trump era is truly Carl Hiaasens moment. These days, Je suis Florida.
-snip-
Admittedly, Fever Beach feels about 100 pages too long the cardinal flaw in most comic novels. But the real question remains: Is it funny? And in this case, should we be laughing? How many times have we been solemnly admonished to strive toward understanding the culty racists festering on the edge of the Republican Party? Are red-white-and-blue charlatans suitable subjects for comedy in light of our countrys slide toward fascism the unraveling of environmental protections, the sabotage of science and medicine, the attacks on election integrity, the tirades against immigrants poisoning the blood of America?
Yes. Without in any way diminishing the seriousness of the threats were facing or the difficulty of restoring moral and political order to the United States, humor remains a powerful weapon to pierce the armor of tyrants and raise the spirits of patriots. For all his silliness, Hiaasen is working in a grand tradition that stretches back to Mikhail Bulgakov satirizing Stalinism and Charlie Chaplin mocking Hitler. At his best, he can pack a paragraph with so many little parodic bangs that it feels like a fireworks display, when the explosions come so fast you stop saying Ahhh and just stand in slack-jawed bedazzlement.
-snip-
Given Jeff Bezos's lurch into his new right-wing-zombie era, it's a bit of a surprise that WaPo ran this. But I'm glad it did.
I discovered Hiaasen's novels more than 30 years ago. I'd recommend all of them, and there are some recurring characters. But Democrats new to his work will probably love his latest two, if they want to start there.
And we can all use some well-written humor these days...

sop
(14,122 posts)writers...have seen their spears glance off the great whales gilded blubber."
highplainsdem
(55,882 posts)ultralite001
(1,608 posts)"great WHITE whales gilded blubber."
SheltieLover
(67,731 posts)

highplainsdem
(55,882 posts)SheltieLover
(67,731 posts)I read 2-3 fiction titles/day. Hard to find new ones.
yorkster
(3,042 posts)not read much of him lately, I've wondered what his take would be on Trump and his Regime. Thanks for pointing the way to
"Fever Beach".
highplainsdem
(55,882 posts)yorkster
(3,042 posts)highplainsdem
(55,882 posts)I hope Hiaasen won't wait another five years to do another book about MAGA. They've given him so damn much material.
DET
(1,997 posts)Ive often thought that Tom Wolfe (RIP) or Christopher Buckley were among the few writers who could do justice to the absurdity of our times. Forgot about Hiaasen. Ill have to read his latest.
JustABozoOnThisBus
(24,118 posts)SheltieLover
(67,731 posts)

hannah
(316 posts)Is a gem.
unc70
(6,397 posts)highplainsdem
(55,882 posts)badhair77
(4,854 posts)Cant wait to check out Fever Beach.
sestina
(272 posts)Carl Hiaasen in the 80's and 90's. Will have to go back to the ones I missed and his current ones.
For many years I also loved reading crime novels by Andrew Vachss, James Lee Burke, Elmore Leonard, James W. Hall, Laurence Block, to name a few.