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Reveling in outrageous shenanigans and hilariously off-kilter characters, Shoveling Smoke (now in paperback) does for East Texas what Carl Hiaasen's novels do for South Florida. Burned-out corporate lawyer Clay Parker chucks it all and moves from Houston to a tiny firm in a dusty small town, searching for his lost integrity and a simpler life. Instead, he lands in the middle of a bungled fraud case defending the disreputable and downright nasty Bevo Rasmussen, accused of torching the stables housing his over-insured thoroughbreds. Immediately confronted with corrupt officials, crazed survivalists, an incompetent hit man, an emu, and a naked county clerk, along with an assortment of vengeful wives and great barbecue, Clay discovers that nothing is what it seems to be. By the end, our hero gets way more than he bargained for, justice (Texas-style) gets served, and the reader gets a laugh-out-loud whodunit.
A Houston lawyer's attempt to escape the rat race backfires with hilarious results in Davis's thoroughly enjoyable debut crime novel. Sardonic Clay Parker's new job in the tiny East Texas town of Jenks gets off to a bumpy start when he has to fetch one of his two bosses, Gill Stroud, from jail (where he's been sleeping off a whopping bender) and help him sober up in time to win a murder trial. His next assignment is even tougher: defending sleazy Bevo Rasmussen (Parker calls him a "shady little buccaneer," but takes note of the razor hidden in his sock), who's accused of setting fire to a barn full of prized thoroughbreds for the insurance money. Romance enters the picture when Parker falls for a powerful, sexy court clerk named Sally Dean, whose father happens to be a horse-trading kingpin with links to Rasmussen and tentacles extending into virtually every major criminal enterprise in the county. As Parker works feverishly to prepare for trial, his efforts are hindered by his rambunctious, bumbling partners: Stroud can't lay off the juice, and his partner, Hardwick Chandler, shows an equal passion for womanizing. Davis uses his quirky characters to capture the seat-of-the-pants flavor of law in a Texas backwater, and the charming but somewhat kinky romance between Parker and Dean works as a nice counterpoint to the legal shenanigans. The going's a little rough in spots, but Parker is an engaging protagonist whose humor and savvy easily carry the inaugural volume of this promising series. (Oct.) Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.
More Reviews and RecommendationsAustin Davis is a native Texan. This is his first novel.
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May 12, 2006: This was one that you can't put down. Great first novel, can't wait for the next adventures of Clay Parker.
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August 08, 2004: My husband and I read, laughed at, and thoroughly enjoyed these people. I worked in legal offices in Oklahoma for a number of years and didn't have to stretch my imagination a bit to believe the characters were real people. What a wonder story teller Austin Davis is. Really hope there are more manuscripts already written just waiting to be published.