Authors: Les Standiford
ISBN-13: 9781590580028, ISBN-10: 1590580028
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Poisoned Pen Press
Date Published: October 2002
Edition: (Non-applicable)
Les Standiford is best known for his series of hard-boiled detective capers starring tough guy John Deal -- a hero the legendary James Ellroy once called "the unassailable new kingpin of the South Florida crime novel." Perhaps one of the only popular crime writers today with a Ph.D. in creative writing, Standiford leads the writing program at Florida International University in between books.
Done Deal is the first in the series featuring reluctant sleuth John Deal, a South Florida building contractor who has a penchant for stepping into the path of the wrong people. Here, Deal is struggling to
rebuild the once formidable DealCo, a development company once headed by his flamboyant father Barton Dealbut little does he know that the piece of
land upon which he plans to build a small apartment complex is coveted by a ruthless businessman intent on making a fortune off Major League Baseball's
arrival in South Florida.
Satire-laden Florida thriller from Standiford (Spill, 1991)with quirky characters, vivid settings, and riveting action done in Sam Peckinpah's slo-mo style. Baseball is happening in southern Florida. Down-on-his-luck Johnny Deal, son of a one-time prosperous developer, seemingly for old times' sake has been invited to a soir,e aboard his dad's old pal's yachta gathering of movers and shakers hoping to bring the national pastime to Miami. Despite Thornton Penfield's opulent hospitality, the evening is a maudlin reminder of days past. So Deal and pregnant wife Janice escape early. The next day Deal's on his way to the Little Havana fourplex he's renovating (the last of his father's legacy) when a driver tries to run him off the road. To boot, his brakes fail and Deal narrowly avoids the ensuing multi-vehicle accident. This marks the onset of a rapid-fire series of debacles. First, Deal's wife is forced off a bridge and assumed drowned. Then he finds himself the focal point of mishaps orchestrated (he'll learn) by Cuban racketeer Raoul Alcazar. All this is niftily centered around the real-life question of who profits when a new major-league baseball franchise is awardedone of Alcazar's hoods, black ex-footballer Leon Straight, has all the best lines on that and other subjects. A memorable creation, Leon is an all-time bad dude, offing several people and a dog in new and interesting ways. For himself, Deal is sided by dead best buddy Flivey Penfield and Homer the dwarf. Throw all of the above into the mix with Standiford's depiction of Miami's exotic landscape, melting-pot populace, and social ills for a page-turner of the first water.