Despite having given this book a three star rating I have some quibbles with it. I'll offer the gripes first.
1) The Title
I know that the author is trying to be clever, but I'm sorry, this title just didn't do it for me. Of course, the author had to choose something.
2) The Hero
Zack Chasteen, former football store, ex-con (pardoned after being exonerated) and owner of a Palm Tree Nursery is a huge enigma... When he is recruited by a former pro-football roommate to help provide some security for a Jamaican Resort owner it makes no sense at all. He refuses to carry a gun and exactly what is his experience that makes him right to bring in to solve security problems.. NONE!!!
The fact that the resort is a "swingers" resort and he refuses all advances from the beautiful women who are after him is commendable, he is in a committed relationship of sorts. While commendable, and comical, it certainly seems odd to me.
Zack also has a gift for talking himself out of trouble with almost anybody, whether the Jamaican police, gangsters, corrupt government operatives, or even employers and their families. Sometimes it is just a bit too much.
3) The Plot
The author does a good enough job of creating possible bad guys and driving the action and the mystery along. However, about half-way through he telegraphed a major plot giveaway that really spoiled this one for me. I knew who the bad guy was (or one of them) for more than half the book and I have to honestly declare that it wasn't due to cleverness, but due to a clue that was just a little too obvious. Looking back, I can see a manner in which the clue could have been dropped, and the reader stil shccked by it when the time came. Sorry, but this spoiled a bit of it for me.
THE GOOD STUFF
I enjoyed the subplot about Zack's girl being wooed by a larger magazine publisher. The author seemed to genuinely understand some of the difficulties in selling a small publication to a larger company and watching "your baby" get ruined. Saw this happen with a magazine I was on the peripheral of and that magazine barely exists today.
Zack's expressions are always clever and witty. I particularly liked one quote, which I will try to repeat here, though I don't promise to get it 100% word for word... "When I climb up on my high horse I tend to give it a long, hard ride." He tends to offer sarcasm at the right time, clever wordplay from time to time, and so the dialogue is often genuinely funny.
There was also some interesting things about Jamaican superstitions regarding the recently deceased. This offered some solid flavor and interest to the novel.
THE MIXED STUFF
The author writes in short, crisp chapters. Usually, that's a good thing. In this case there were a number of chapter breaks that I didn't think should have existed. Some chapters were as short as two and half pages and should have blended into the next chapter. On the other hand, this style tends to keep the reader going through the book because he or she feels that "one more chapter" won't take too long to read and it never does. I just felt that it was a bit overdone this time.
Bogey, Zack's faithful "Indian" companion is always fun, but being a bit psychic takes a step further out on the limb that I like to go. I like the fact that he is always offering herbs and teas and stuff, which make for good characterization, but knowing when something is going to happen just seems a tad too far fetched for me.
OVERALL
The book was worth reading-- but I could never really see why Zack was involved. It just didn't make sense for him to even partcipate in this storyline. The dialogue and the superstition stuff made the book interesting enough to finish and of course I wanted to see if I had really read that middle of the book clue properly (I did!) but it fell short of great writing. Good, better than adequate, but nothing exceptional is my opinion.