Sundial was invited to host a conversation at the 40th anniversary of the Miami Book Fair. One of the largest literary events in the world.
More than 250 people crammed into an auditorium over the weekend to hear us talk to one of the greats. And we wanted to share that day with you.
Our guest is the most Florida Man, Carl Hiaasen.
Hiaasen is the bard of Florida. He鈥檚 our conscience and our raconteur.
He kept politicians in check for decades as a Miami Herald columnist. He blasted the corporations and shady grifters. He used his gift to advocate for our beaches and the Everglades. And he does that with his books, too.
But you don鈥檛 read Carl Hiaasen's work because it鈥檚 good for you. You read his work because his stories are a delight.
Eleven of his novels with those two-word titles became national bestsellers. One of them, Bad Monkey, is coming soon to TV on Apple Plus. Your kids know his work, too. One-word titles, like Skink. And Hoot. (That was a movie, too.)
Hiaasen's got a new one-word title out, called . It鈥檚 the story of a fifth-generation Key West kid, or a conch, who loves to fish and boat. His life takes a turn when he stumbles across a couple of smugglers in a stranded speedboat.
He draws inspiration from his childhood, part of which he spent in the Keys, before he moved out to the Broward suburbs.
"I've always wanted to just kind of set a novel there where the main character was a kid growing up there 鈥 and all he has is a little boat and a bicycle, which is all you need in Key West." he said. "It gives me a chance to sort of fantasize what it was. I mean, I grew up in West Broward County, which ... now is nothing but concrete and expressways."
It鈥檚 another young adult novel, but don鈥檛 get it twisted. Hiaasen鈥檚 writing in Wrecker is like any of his other work. It鈥檚 an Armani suit tailored for a child.
True to his journalistic background, the book gives a nod to the current events in Florida 鈥 smuggling vaccine cards, reconciling with a place's racial history and cleaning up iguana poop from cemeteries as a side hustle. And what can be oftentimes bleak news, he turns into an engaging story.
"One of the attractions of writing novels 鈥 you do get to write your own endings," he said. "The good guys win sometimes and you can make something hideous happen to the bad guys, which I enjoy more than anything. "
On the Nov. 22 episode of Sundial, we talk with Hiaasen about his work, growing up in Florida and why we've heard he鈥檚 a pretty tough guy to go fishing with.
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