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Overview
The Republicans' "golden boy" — and a loyal, unquestioning tool of the powerful special interests — handsome, unthreatening, Florida governor-by-default Marlon Conrad seems a virtual shoo-in for re-election. That is, until he undergoes a radical personality shift during a bloody military action in the Balkans. Now it's just three weeks before the election and Marlon is suddenly talking about "issues" and "reform" as he crosses the length and breadth of his home state with an amnesiac speechwriter and a chief of staff who turns catatonic in the presence of minorities. The governor's new-found conscience might well cost him the election, though. And it appears that pretty much everybody from Tallahassee to Miami Beach is trying to kill him...
Synopsis
The Republicans' "golden boy" and a loyal, unquestioning tool of the powerful special interests handsome, unthreatening, Florida governor-by-default Marlon Conrad seems a virtual shoo-in for re-election. That is, until he undergoes a radical personality shift during a bloody military action in the Balkans. Now it's just three weeks before the election and Marlon is suddenly talking about "issues" and "reform" as he crosses the length and breadth of his home state with an amnesiac speechwriter and a chief of staff who turns catatonic in the presence of minorities. The governor's new-found conscience might well cost him the election, though. And it appears that pretty much everybody from Tallahassee to Miami Beach is trying to kill him...
July 8, 2001 - Tampa Tribune
Dorsey has emerged a leader ... in the parody/satire/humorist business.
Editorials
From Barnes & Noble
Tim Dorsey, author of the hysterical novels Florida Roadkill and Hammerhead Ranch Motel, gives his fans another outrageous, bawdy, and raucous tale in Orange Crush. Once again we’re taken on a tour through the dark heart of Florida as gubernatorial candidate Marlon Conrad goes off the deep end and winds up touring in a campaign bus gaudily ornamented with a giant Orange Crush logo. Story threads involving a bizarre serial killer hooked on the folklore of Florida and Marlon’s opponent Gomer Tatum, who wants to win the race by holding a WWF death match, also keep this sardonic novel running in high gear. Orange Crush offers satirical situations, laugh-out-loud dialogue, and plenty of action that will win this popular author even more diehard fans.Orlando Sentinel
Tim Dorsey stirs up an elixir that even Big Sugar, with all its political clout, could not make more sweet.—July 8, 2001
Miami Herald
Nobody but nobody writes like this guy.—July 22, 2001
St. Petersburg Times
Dorsey spares almost no one in his third novel, and that's what makes Orange Crush so wickedly refreshing.—July 8, 2001
Tampa Tribune
Dorsey has emerged a leader ... in the parody/satire/humorist business.—July 8, 2001
Sarasota Herald-Tribune
Florida crime fiction has its stars ... Dorsey, with yet another consistently entertaining page-turner, may be stealing the franchise.—July 1, 2001