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enlarge | Author: Tim Dorsey Publisher: William Morrow Category: Book
List Price: $24.95 Buy New: $11.65 You Save: $13.30 (53%)
New (31) Used (26) Collectible (3) from $9.90
Rating: 37 reviews Sales Rank: 27179
Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 352 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.2 Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 5.8 x 1.2
ISBN: 0060829699 Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54 EAN: 9780060829698 ASIN: 0060829699
Publication Date: February 1, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Hil-ar-e-ous! As always July 14, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Gotta love these characters.... I continue to enjoy the hilarious romps, rolls, and adventures of Surge and the Gang.
Killer comedy July 13, 2008 16 out of 24 found this review helpful
Dorsey serves up Serge #10 But as it's my first I hope you'll humor me As I enthuse
A Florida setting Is the stage for A murderously humorous Serial killer With selective morals
Serge, Anti-hero, ladies man And a genius When it comes to Revenge killings
Indeed, Serge A. Storms is the star of the Dorsey books. Mentally unbalanced and off his meds, he somehow manages to be a likeable character - even when he's devising ingenious ways of killing bad people. In this book he kills at least six people in unique ways, although he's not the only interesting character.
Other characters:
Jim Davenport - Jim and his wife Martha first met Serge ten years before the events of this book. They lived in Triggerfish Lane (another book title in the series) and were survivors of a home invasion by the McGraw Brothers. They have now moved to Lobster Lane, and aren't too pleased to see Serge.
Coleman - Serge's drug-addled sidekick, and dumb as a post, except when it comes to bong-making.
Rachael - Six foot tall professional girl with a drug habit and a heck of a mouth
The G-Unit - Four feisty grannies leading a cruise ship existence while participating in extreme ballroom dancing and illicit boozing
Tex McGraw - McGraw Brother who missed the Triggerfish Lane invasion, and is still sore about it.
Smugglers in white linen and Smugglers in tunics - A game of pass the artifacts involves many leading characters
Johnny Vegas - The Accidental Virgin
Gaylord Wainscotting -Resident of Lobster Lane
Foxtrot - Secret Agent
Dorsey is a genius of comedy and timing, as his characters interlock and intertwine into a story of grand proportions. Recommended for fans of Carl Hiaasen and dark comedies.
Rated: 4.5 stars
Amanda Richards, July 12, 2008
AWFUL, says this once-loyal reader June 10, 2008 3 out of 6 found this review helpful
I guess that writers of series of books obligate themselves to write a set number of them for a set price, and then try to meet the obligation by making an effort at writing the first few, then churning out the last one while half-asleep. I got the sense that this book was Dorsey's final effort in this particular publishing sequence. Unreadably absurd. Understanding that the Storms novels are intended to be over the top, there is a certain skill at work in keeping the ridiculous still plausible. All pretense of "absurd plausibility" is gone in this meager effort - culled, it seems, from a series of whacky ideas conceived while jogging (or driving or walking), noted, and then incorporated all at once into a single volume with no attempt at continuity, plot, or narrative. And when, by the way, did Coleman get so articulate? This book is a bust, folks. Avoid it! [P.S. - I have never personally communicated with an author. . . until I read this book. Inconsequential that it was, I still picked the "contact" tab on Dorsey's website, and asked where, please, can I get my money back? I haven't heard back.]
In This Novel, The "Serge" is Definitely Working!!! May 27, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Every now and then I have to read a novel set in Florida. I don't usually do it back to back, but in this instance I had just finished James W. Hall's latest, Hell's Bay. If Hall can be said to be Carl Hiassen without the humor, then Dorsey is Carl Hiassen on steroids and with little regard for the ecology of the area.
What he does have in abundance in a strange stable of interesting and zany characters which he manages to bundle together in sometimes mind bending adventures. Sometimes he lets his penchant for black humor get somewhat out of control. In this particular book, I would say he has the ingredients just about right.
It is a waste of time to try and give a plot line to these books as I am not even sure I know exactly what it was. You just open the book, climb on and let the story unwind.
This type of novel is not everyone's cup of tea, but if it is yours, this is a keeper.
Carl Hiaasen's Evil Twin May 11, 2008 5 out of 7 found this review helpful
If you've read Tim Dorsey, you know what to expect: black comedy thrown in your face at a manic pace, an unrelenting joyride so fast and furious that it almost makes reading an aerobic exercise. Like the venerable Carl Hiaasen, Dorsey taps into Florida's seemingly endless source of material provided by its wacky residents and sordid history, an embarrassment of riches in the outlandish and the unthinkable that is uniquely the Sunshine State. And like Hiaasen, Dorsey is passionately protective of Florida's natural beauty and heritage, a fierce preservationist you uses cynical humor to attack the developers and other despoilers of Florida landscape and culture. But compared to Dorsey's amphetamine-like rush, colored with violence so creative one nearly forgets the brutality, Hiaasen's clever prose and well crafted characters lose color.
Back with a vengeance - literally - is Serge Storms, and predictably, sex, murder, drugs, more murder, more sex, and history - the usual Dorsey fare. In Serge, Dorsey has concocted one of the most lovably bizarre characters of pop fiction, the serial killer with an encyclopedic knowledge of all-things-Florida and a refreshingly black-and-white sense of frontier justice that he delivers without hesitation and without remorse. Coleman, his loyal and in his perpetual drug and alcohol induced coma is back as well, providing an extra dose of comic relief - as if more was needed - as well as contrast to Serge's drug and alcohol free regimen. Not that plot matters much to Dorsey - or his readers - but "Atomic Lobster" mostly picks up where "Triggerfish Twist" left off, with the despicably dangerous Tex McGraw out of jail and Hell-bent for revenge on the docile Jim Davenport and his family. But what follows is not all "decapitation-by-train" or "bobbing-for-fried-catfish-in-boiling-oil" depravity. Dorsey has a keen and insightful understanding of American culture - from cruise ships to the NFL to drug smuggling - as well as the human soul - both peaks and depths - and has an unparalleled knack of capturing these wildly diverse topics in prose that is zany, entertaining, outrageous, and, paradoxically meaningful. Like the best stand up comics, Dorsey knows it's all about timing, and uses bits of nonlinearity and a keen sense of pace in delivering his screwball goods. If you've never had the pleasure of a Tim Dorsey novel, this is probably not the best place to start - "Hammerhead Ranch Motel" is as good as any for some indoctrination.
In short, don't let the frantic antics of Serge and the strong cast of supporting actors camouflage Dorsey's genius: this is pop fiction as good as it gets, a not-too-destructive addiction that will have you laughing out loud while not being able to turn the pages fast enough.
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