Novelist and cuddly curmudgeon Alan H. Rolnick takes the reader on a wild ride through Miami with "Landmark Status," a fast-paced caper that has reviewers invoking Carl Hiaasen and Mark Twain.
Look and Listen
Biography
I grew up in a sleepy river town playing baseball and Beatles songs, wishing I lived someplace different. Twenty years of law practice in Miami, whose heart-stopping beauty and self-absorbed chaos challenged me daily to figure out where on earth I was, left no doubt I’d gotten my wish.
Inspiration
Miami’s a frontier town, where outsiders easily become insiders, bellying up to the bar, tipping back a mojito and quickly learning there’s no secret handshake. I’d never been in such a place, and my legal training had dropped me off in its inner sanctum. There, I worked and tangled with kaleidoscopically colorful movers and shakers who were busy with Miami’s principal business, buying and selling the same dirt over and over again. I also got involved in litigating some of Miami’s more infamous Ponzi schemes. Having become a fan of Elmore Leonard, Carl Hiaasen and Dave Barry, I wanted to do my part to honor this unique, subtropical nuthouse. It just had to involve a mad scramble for a piece of property, set against a backdrop of investment fraud. And it had to have a lawyer in the middle, doing real lawyering, citing real cases.
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