Senin, 16 Maret 2015

[F625.Ebook] Ebook Free The Man Who Invented Florida (Doc Ford Novels), by Randy Wayne White

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The Man Who Invented Florida (Doc Ford Novels), by Randy Wayne White

The Man Who Invented Florida (Doc Ford Novels), by Randy Wayne White



The Man Who Invented Florida (Doc Ford Novels), by Randy Wayne White

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The Man Who Invented Florida (Doc Ford Novels), by Randy Wayne White

When solitary marine biologist Doc Ford focused his telescope on the woman in the white boat, he didn't know his life was about to be capsized: that his conniving uncle Tucker Gatrell would discover the Fountain of Youth, that The National Enquirer would write about it, and that the law would beat down his door in search of three missing men.

But Doc Ford is about to find these things out-- the hard way. Because in the shadowy world of Southwest Florida, where gators yawn, cattle craze, and Indian bones are buried, mysteries great and small have found the man to solve them...in The Man Who Invented Florida by bestselling author Randy Wayne White.

  • Sales Rank: #62569 in Books
  • Brand: White, Randy Wayne
  • Published on: 1997-03-15
  • Released on: 1997-03-15
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 6.84" h x .84" w x 4.23" l,
  • Binding: Mass Market Paperback
  • 294 pages

From Publishers Weekly
In the third Doc Ford adventure, White again seamlessly splices an offbeat west coast of Florida locale with even more offbeat inhabitants. Principal among them is Doc Ford, who operates a small biological-supply business from a lab in his stilt-supported house. Lately, Doc has tried to control his telescope viewing of a tanned, red-haired woman who skinny-dips off an offshore sailboat and to limit his beer intake to four a day. While trying to be patient with his hippie pal Thomlinson, who drops by to expound on many topics, Doc reluctantly gets involved with his Uncle Tucker, who lives up the coast in Mango. Tuck has discovered a well of healing water on his land that he claims is responsible for his old gelded horse's newly grown testicles. Smuggled into a local rest home, the water has dramatically revived the moribund sex life of his Native American buddy Joseph Egret. Tuck's trouble is his somewhat uncertain ownership of the land. While he importunes Doc for help, the local news focuses on the disappearance into the mangrove swamps of two government investigators and a much loathed TV fisherman. Like fellow Floridian Carl Hiaasen, White ( The Heat Islands ) is adept at weaving ecological concerns into an oddball narrative with no loss of steam. The fate of the three missing men, even by bizarre Florida crime fiction standards, is inspired.
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal
Series veterans Marion "Doc" Ford and hippie friend Tomlinson ( Sanibel Flats , St. Martin's, 1990) become tangentially involved in the case of three men who go missing near Dinkin's Bay. The "victims" seem to have nothing in common except bad luck; their portion of a broader story melds with a mostly amusing plot dealing with the proposed government expansion of the Everglades National Park. White offers an eclectic vision of Florida with his laid-back prose but pays close attention to various "characters," especially Marion's braggart uncle. Upbeat, literate, fascinating, and clever: manna for deeper readers.
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist
Doc Ford operates a small Florida marine supply business, but his passion is marine research. Ford's uncle, Tucker Gatrell, an old Florida cowboy who at various times has been a guide, a poacher, a rumrunner, and a gun dealer, thinks he's found the fountain of youth in a small sulfurous spring on his property--or what used to be his property until he sold it to the state for a national park addition. Tucker's partner is Joseph Egret, a Native American who escaped from a nursing home after a few doses of Tucker's alleged magic elixir. The two old-timers want Ford's help in analyzing and eventually marketing the potion. Ford tries to wash his hands of the pair but gets sucked in when three prominent Floridians disappear in the area and Tucker becomes a suspect. The mystery aspects of White's tale--though expertly developed and perfectly engaging--pale next to the extraordinary characters and pointedly humorous dialogue. Maybe it's the presence of the Chief Broom-like Joseph Egret, but this unusual and very entertaining novel may remind readers of One Flew over the Cuckoo's Nest. Tucker Gatrell and Randall Patrick McMurphy are certainly kindred spirits. Wes Lukowsky

Most helpful customer reviews

33 of 35 people found the following review helpful.
A different Doc Ford tale
By RevChrisEsq
One reviewer posted that "even an average Doc Ford story is better than most". While that's certainly true, I'm not sure this is an "average" Doc Ford story--it's just different.
Because it's barely about Doc Ford. Oh sure he appears here and there and sort of rescues the situation at the end. But the story is really about Doc's uncle and his Indian friend/co hort.
Which by the way, does make this the funniest in the Doc Ford series.
Having read every one of the 10 Doc Ford books as of end of 2003, here's my list of how they all rate, (drum roll, please):
(5 stars)
Captiva
Twelve Mile Limit
Shark River
The Heat Islands
Ten Thousand Islands
Sanibal Flats (the first in the series)
The following are the 4 stars in the series--great stories, but I wouldn't recommend them as a first read of the author:
Everglades
The Man Who Invented Florida
North of Havana
The Mangrove Coast

11 of 12 people found the following review helpful.
Good, but don't over-expect...
By Jack Dempsey
As has been said countless times here, this is a different type of Doc Ford book. Perhaps I did somewhat of a disservice to myself---I started my love of (fictional) Randy Wayne White with "The Ten Thousand Islands." I then worked my way backwards to "The Mangrove Coast," "Captiva," and "North of Havana." I have yet to pick up "Sanibel Flats," but I plan to very soon.
Each of those aforementioned books (with the exception of "Sanibel Flats" and the present review) is Doc Ford tales in the first person. This book is told from the third person. It is a somewhat difficult transition to make. The same is true for "Sanibel Flats"---I've discovered that from a cursory glance at it.
Doc Ford works so brilliantly in the first person, it's hard to accept anything else. Perhaps it sounds a bit odd, but it causes a little alienation to arise between the reader and the character that is Doc Ford. In other words, the reader does not feel as "inside" the character. Presumably this is intentional, but it is difficult coming from the more recent Ford tales to the earlier ones.
That aside, this isn't a typical Doc Ford novel either. It places a bigger spotlight on Tucker Gatrell (Ford's uncle) and his "friend" Joseph Egret. But it is a Ford adventure nonetheless, and it is a (...) good one at that. Randy Wayne White is an absolute master of this genre, and, as many reviewers state, is the definite heir apparent to the throne of John D. MacDonald/Travis McGee.
Definitely pick this one up at some point. Start from the beginning and work your way forward rather than vice-versa. And, definitely pick up his non-fictional works as well. They are absolutely amazing. I can't wait until his new non-fiction work is released in January.
Also, if you haven't already done so, look into anything by James Hall. I'll leave it up to you to find (come on, don't you want to find anything yourselves?!! j/k), but there is an absolutely fantastic Hall book that involves the very same subject matter of White's "Ten Thousand Islands." It is very good to read them back to back.
Enjoy!

6 of 7 people found the following review helpful.
Reinventing Florida
By E. Neily
As a historian who loves a good Florida story, this Randy Wayne White novel really tickled my funny bone. I was not at all put off that it was not a "typical" White novel, but enjoyed every minute of its bizarre twists and turns, its leg-pullin' blended with understandings of Florida's environmental systems. I found it captivating from start to finish. Having waded into the heart of the Fakahatchee Strand, slogged through mangrove swamps in Tampa Bay, and searched Florida archives, I can relate to much of White's tale. This is probably not a book for city-slickers, but by reading it Florida's northern transplants might learn a few lessons as to why Florida is so incredible.

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