Sick Puppy by Carl Hiaasen

Sick Puppy (Inspector Hemingway Mysteries)

by Carl Hiaasen

When eco-enthusiast Twilly Spree spots someone in a Range Rover dumping litter onto the freeway, he decides to teach him a lesson - only to discover that his target is Palmer Stoat, one of Florida's cockiest and most powerful political fixers, whose current project just happens to be the 'malling' of a Gulf Coast Island . . . A quick spot of dognapping later and the pathologically short-tempered Twilly finds himself embroiled in a murky world of singing toads, bogus big-game hunters, large vet bills and in the company of an infamous ex-governer who's gone back to nature with a vengeance. With SICK PUPPY, Carl Hiaasen unleashes another outrageously funny tale that gleefully lives up to its title and proves yet again that Hiaasen is master of the satirical thriller.

'The funniest crime novelist to put pen to paper' - Evening Standard

'A story that'll make you roar with laughter' - Mirror

'Arguably his best novel yet' - Heat

'A refreshing, exhilarating read' - Observer

'Savage and very funny' - Sunday Telegraph'Hiaasen is untouchable' - The Times

Reviewed by ibeforem on

1 of 5 stars

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This was definitely not my favorite Carl Hiaasen. Twilly comes off as a spoiled rich brat who feels justified destroying things when he doesn’t like something, and he really doesn’t grow at all by the end of the book. The “big game hunting” made me sick to my stomach. There was too much death. The only remotely likable character in the book was Desie, and she was just window dressing. I barely talked myself into finishing this one. If this had been the first Hiaasen I read, I would never read another.

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Reading updates

  • Started reading
  • 14 February, 2008: Finished reading
  • 14 February, 2008: Reviewed