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Squeeze Me is a novel by Carl Hiaasen released on August 25, 2020. [1] [2] Hiaasen dedicated the novel to his younger brother, Rob, who was killed during the Capital Gazette shooting on June 28, 2018. The book debuted at #2 on the New York Times Best Seller list. [3]
Carl Hiaasen (/ ˈ h aɪ. ə s ɛ n /; born March 12, 1953) [2] is an American journalist and novelist. He began his career as a newspaper reporter and by the late 1970s had begun writing novels in his spare time, both for adults and for middle grade readers. Two of his novels have been made into feature films, and one has been made into a TV ...
Clinton Tyree, a.k.a. Skink, is a fictional character who has appeared in several novels by Carl Hiaasen, beginning with Double Whammy in 1987. He is a former governor of Florida who suddenly abandoned his office to live in the wilderness, most often the Everglades and, later, the Florida Keys.
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Squeeze Me (2020) Carl Hiaasen: Scott Brick: Penguin Random House Audio 2022 [21] 27th: Aristotle and Dante Dive into the Waters of the World (2021) Benjamin Alire Sáenz: Lin-Manuel Miranda: Simon & Schuster Audio: The Didomenico Fragment: Amor Towles: John Lithgow: Audible Originals Legends of the North Cascades: Jonathan Evison: Edoardo ...
Blondell Wayne Tatum, a.k.a. Chemo, is a fictional character who has appeared in two novels by Carl Hiaasen, Skin Tight and Star Island . [ 1 ] Personal history
Kick Ass is the first of three books which highlight some of Carl Hiaasen's best columns in the newspaper Miami Herald. It was published in 1999, and followed by Paradise Screwed: Selected Columns (2001) and Dance of the Reptiles (2014). The editor, Diane Stevenson, selected columns that focused on Hiaasen's views on growth and government in ...
Mark Lawson of The Guardian praised the book as "a novel highlighted the book's portrayal of Florida, writing that "the greatest pleasure is the feeling that, through long residency and his journalistic beat, Hiaasen owns this location". He also praised it for keeping the author from "becoming a prisoner of style and subject matter", adding ...