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Maverick New Orleans lawyer Tubby Dubonnet, who specializes in bizarre clients, winds up with a gym bag and its million-dollar contents when one of his clients is murdered

208 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published December 28, 1994

1373 people are currently reading
1792 people want to read

About the author

Tony Dunbar

42 books100 followers
Tony Dunbar started writing at quite a young age. When he was 12, growing up in Atlanta, he told people that he was going to be a writer, but it took him until the age of 19 to publish his first book, Our Land Too, based on his civil rights experiences in the Mississippi delta. For entertainment, Tony turned not to television but to reading mysteries such as dozens of Rex Stout’s Nero Wolfe stories. Among his favorites are: Dashiell Hammett, author of The Maltese Falcon, and Tony Hillerman, and John D. MacDonald, and Mickey Spillane.

He has lived in New Orleans for a long, long time, and in addition to writing mysteries and more serious fare he attended Tulane Law School and continues an active practice involving, he says, “money.” That practice took a hit in the Hurricane Katrina flooding, but the experience did produce a seventh Tubby Dubonnet mystery novel, Tubby Meets Katrina

The Tubby series so far comprises seven books: The Crime Czar, City of Beads, Crooked Man, Shelter from the Storm, Trick Question, Lucky Man, and Tubby Meets Katrina. The main character, Tony says, is the City of New Orleans itself, the food, the music, the menace, the party, the inhabitants. But Tubby Dubonnet is the actual protagonist, and he is, like the author, a New Orleans attorney. Unlike the author, however, he finds himself involved in serious crime and murder, and he also ears exceptionally well. He is “40 something,” the divorced father of three daughters, a collector of odd friends and clients, and he is constantly besieged by ethical dilemmas. But he is not fat; he is a former jock and simply big.

Tony’s writing spans quite a few categories and is as varied as his own experiences. He has written about people’s struggle for survival, growing out of his own work as a community organizer in Mississippi and Eastern Kentucky. He has written about young preachers and divinity students who were active in the Southern labor movement in the 1930s, arising from his own work with the Committee of Southern Churchmen and Amnesty International. He has written and edited political commentary, inspired by seeing politics in action with the Voter Education Project. And he has had the most fun with the mysteries, saying, “I think I can say everything I have to say about the world through the medium of Tubby Dubonnet.”

Hurricane Katrina and the floods, which caused the mandatory evacuation of New Orleans for months, blew Tony into an off-resume job serving meals in the parking lot of a Mississippi chemical plant to hundreds of hardhats imported to get the complex dried out and operating. It also gave Tony time to write Tubby Meets Katrina, which was the first published novel set in the storm. It is a little grimmer than most of the books in the series, describing as it does the chaos in the sparsely populated city immediately after the storm. “It was a useful way for me to vent my anger,” Tony says. Still, even in a deserted metropolis stripped of electric power. Tubby manages to find a good meal.

The Tubby Dubonnet series has been nominated for both the Anthony Award and the Edgar Allen Poe Award. While the last one was published in 2006, the author says he is now settling down to write again. But about what? “Birds and wild flowers,” he suggests. Or “maybe television evangelists.” Or, inevitably, about the wondrous and beautiful city of New Orleans.

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5 stars
579 (23%)
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954 (38%)
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706 (28%)
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161 (6%)
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63 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 209 reviews
Profile Image for Monnie.
1,610 reviews792 followers
February 1, 2015
Back in June 2014, I got this one free through BookBub - it sounded interesting and is the first in a series of seven, I believe. Set in New Orleans, the author is a New Orleans attorney, and the series has been nominated for both Anthony and Edgar Allen Poe awards. It's also relatively short - just 224 pages - and reader reviews are fairly positive. So what did I have to lose?

Not much, as it turns out. Right off the bat, one sentence made my day: "There were enough law books on the shelves to put new clients at ease." As a former legal secretary (albeit a long time ago), I get it. Really.

New Orleans lawyer Tubby Dubonnet, the "star" of the show, loves fishing, drinking and lots of other non-lawyerly things. His client list includes a transvestite entertainer and the doctor who has referred that same disgruntled entertainer to Dubonnet during a malpractice lawsuit (say what??). Tubby's also got the requisite ex-wife and a handful-minus two teenage daughters; now, he's got a new client, the manager of a local nightclub who, it seems, has been nailed for theft of a ton of marijuana. But right off the bat, the client insists on leaving a gym bag with Tubby - who discovers it's not full of marijuana.

The entire book is what I'd call laid back, with rather ho-hum dialogue and not much real action (although it does pick up a bit near the end. It's also a little tough to keep the characters straight, but that, too, gets easier as the story goes along. Perhaps the biggest issue is that the Kindle format is a little rough - no line spaces between paragraphs - but once I got used to that, everything moved along splendidly and the well-thought-out plot is quite enjoyable.

And that means yes, I plan to look into other books in this series; as short as they are, they're perfect for a quick "filler" read in between, say, a Stephen King and a David Baldacci. Good job, Mr. Dunbar!
Profile Image for Charles Ray.
Author 542 books150 followers
November 18, 2015
New Orleans lawyer Tubby Dubonnet is a simple man with fancy tastes. When a new client, caught with a load of marijuana, gives Tubby a gym bag full of cash for safekeeping, nothing is simple anymore. His client dies unexpectedly of lead poisoning (the projectile kind) and Tubby’s left literally holding the bag. If the cops catch him with it he could go to jail, but that’s not the worst of his problems—there are others who are willing to kill him for it.
Crooked Man by Tony Dunbar is the first book in the Tubby Dubonnet series. Full of local color, action, and plenty of laughs, this is a mystery with a cast of over the top characters that are totally entertaining.
Dunbar is a maestro at whipping you through the action like a bullwhip, hanging you over the ledge, and then dropping you into the middle of Tubby’s muddle. When you finally crawl out, you’re ready to go back and do it all over again. Three cheers for Tubby.
Profile Image for T.L..
Author 28 books25 followers
July 24, 2016
I started this series out of sequence and fell in love with it.
I adore the setting of New Orleans and like the way Dunbar sprinkles food references in the story. He makes New Orleans itself as much of a character as the people in the story.
Crooked Man sets the stage for the rest of the series in a nice way, referring to the main character's divorce after the fact. We find out where Tubby Dubbonet went to law school, how many daughters he has, what kind of car he drives, what he likes to eat, etc.
I liked this book a lot. It's not a deep mystery, but like a lot of mystery novels, it's good enough that it's like potato chips, you can't stop with just one. I've got 4 more Tubby Dubonnet novels to read and I look forward to them.
Profile Image for Johnny.
Author 10 books142 followers
July 12, 2018
I accidentally purchased the first Tubby Dubonnet mystery, Crooked Man from an online site because of my fat fingers on my erroneously identified “smart phone.” In all fairness, I had intended to download the free trial because I had heard that these novels had similarities to some Elmore Leonard novels. To be sure, the homage to Leonard can be seen in some of the weird events in which this New Orleans defense attorney finds himself, but The Crooked Man just doesn’t have the verisimilitude of the Leonard oeuvre.

What Crooked Man does have is a strange and varied cast. Where one has the predictable crooked politician that would make Huey Long look like the Lone Ranger, one has the crooked enforcer (and his more sinister Barney Fife accomplice) who is perceived as an actual police officer, though not one. Where one has the wealthy and seductive night club owner to be expected, one is rewarded with “Monster Mudbug,” an eccentric food truck (more like food trailer) purveyor of crawfish who continually runs afoul of regulations he doesn’t seem to understand. Where one has the expected genteel Southern attorney from an aristocratic background, this is balanced by the coke-sniffing, trick-turning, victim of a wife beater who turns out to be made of sterner stuff than she seems and the transvestite who seeks damages for a cosmetic surgery (not to be confused with “the” surgery) gone wrong.

Tubby surfs the crud atop the waves of both the legal system and the illegal scams going on in this version of a fictional New Orleans (I keep reading so many novels set there that I might need to go back there soon!) such that one isn’t quite sure whether the eponymous crook is one of the supporting characters or Tubby himself. Tubby certainly knows how to skirt the bounds of the ethics standards set by the bar, but he also seems to have his own code of ethics. Indeed, the book might well have been entitled Crooked People, but I guess that wouldn’t have been the right honey to draw mystery and caper fans. Of course, the novels of Westlake, Hiassen, and Leonard which author Tony Dunbar is clearly emulating are also full of characters with questionable ethics.

Crooked Man made for nice airport reading during a long layover and would work well as beach reading, but it’s not something I would keep on my shelf.
Profile Image for Bonnye Reed.
4,686 reviews105 followers
February 22, 2025
I re-read the first in the Tubby Palooza tales after I had obtained 9 of this series - and Crooked Man still tickled me and brought back memories of NO, LA. Looking forward to a Tubby marathon. This is a lawyer I’m inclined to adore. The tale is well defined, the lawyerize not overwhelming, and the characters awesome. If you love mysteries and/or The Big Easy, this is a series to get your teeth into. Reviewing this after I got into #3, and upped my 2018 4* rating to *****. A series always takes a deeper look at the story. The characters become familiar and endearing.
REVIEWED on February 21, 2025, at Goodreads, AmazonSmile and BookBub. Not available for review on B&N or Kobo.
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This was an easy, fast read and a hoot a minute. The first the Tubby Dubonnet novels by Tony Dunbar, I received this Kindle copy free from Amazon. It is the first Tubby I will read but certainly not the last.
Reviewed on February 25, 2018 at Goodreads, AmazonSmile, and Barnes&Noble.
Profile Image for Tulay.
1,202 reviews2 followers
December 26, 2014
Interesting characters.

Sometimes you can't tell who is your friend, who is your enemy. Tubby is lawyer but characters he deals make you smile. Like the ending, maybe you won't.
Profile Image for Jane.
1,260 reviews16 followers
November 4, 2020
Sandy Shandell is an entertainer and he’s suing his plastic surgeon, Dr. Feingold over a botched operation. Sandy, however, asked Dr. Feingold to recommend a malpractice lawyer to him.


Meanwhile, Monique has moved to New Orleans from her hometown of Evergreen, Alabama to escape her abusive ex-husband. She finally gets a job waiting tables at a restaurant. Soon after, she meets a restaurant owner named Darryl Alvarez at a party her boss threw and they start dating.


Daryl then offers her a job at his restaurant and she accepts. Sometimes when Darryl throws parties, he sets her up with his rich clientele. Monique has a four-year-old daughter named Lisa who lives with Monique’s mother in Evergreen. What little money Monique makes she sends home to help raise her daughter.


Then Monique is blackmailed by one of Darryl’s clientele, Mr. Casey, a rogue cop who’s threatened to rat her out to her probation officer back in Alabama. Also, he’s threatened to expose her to her ex-husband who wants custody of their daughter. In exchange for his silence, he wants Monique to keep tabs on Darryl and she agrees.


When Darryl gets busted for unloading fifteen bales of marijuana from a shrimp boat, Reggie, Tubby’s business partner asks Tubby to represent Darryl. Shortly after Tubby meets with his new client (who hands him a gym bag filled with money), Darryl is shot dead at his restaurant.


Of course Tubby didn’t realize the contents of the bag till he hears his client was dead. When he finally opens it, he finds wads of bills almost a million dollars. Tubby must decide quickly what to do about the money.


This is my fifth book by the author. Can’t seem to get enough. Love this Tubby Dubonnet series!
Profile Image for Nina.
1,840 reviews10 followers
July 27, 2019
The first in the Tubby Dubonnet series (I've read three others), and I don't think the author had hit his stride yet. This was a bit weaker than the others, but still quite entertaining. Since real places in New Orleans are mentioned, it's nice to be able to go online and see pictures of where the characters are going about their business. In this book, Tubby, with his sometimes dubious ethics, takes on defending a drug dealer who deposits $950K in Tubby's office safe, and when the guy is murdered, Tubby manages to help himself to some of the money before using the bulk of it to help out a couple pals (a doctor who messed up a treatment and can't afford the big fine, and his patient, an exotic male dancer who could use the money for a sex change operation.) Both are friends of Tubby's, so why not?
Profile Image for Arnaud.
476 reviews6 followers
March 15, 2024
Pretty all right for a first one. We get to meet Tubby Dubonnet, a laid back and fairly bland lawyer in the good city of NOLA. Fun mystery to go along with, it wraps up decently well while a bit slow to unfold. Pleasant pseudo-spoiler: the characters introduced in this first volume are gonna pop back again the future volumes in the series, for those that matter :-) Took me a moment to get into it admittedly, but I wanted to see it through since I do enjoy New Orleans and its atmosphere quite a bit
Profile Image for Michael C. Cordell.
Author 13 books122 followers
February 12, 2021
Tubby Dubonnet is a complex and interesting character. The storyline is engaging, the line between good and bad is blurred as it is in the real world. Looking forward to the rest of the books in the series.
Profile Image for S.A. Krishnan.
Author 31 books225 followers
June 4, 2019
Quirky story with perfect mystery. Engaging read
Profile Image for Kimberly Hicks.
Author 1 book196 followers
June 11, 2015
I haven't read any books from this author before, and I must say, I was pleasantly surprised with how well I enjoyed this novel.

Tubby Dubonnet has quite a sarcastic sense of humor which resonates throughout the story. His partner, Reggie Turntide, asked him to take on a new client, Daryl Alvarez, and when he agrees to take Daryl's case, strange things begin to occur. For instance, Daryl stops by Tubby's office and asks if he can hold onto a large blue gym bag. Tubby takes law very seriously and doesn't believe in doing anything that would cause him legal woes, so when his client asks him a very basic question as to hold onto his bag, the first thing Tubby thinks is "what's inside?" Daryl tells him it's a bunch of paper and when Tubby goes to lift it up, he can barely do so. That action, in and of itself, gave Tubby pause.

Then, someone decided to wreak havoc on Tubby's law practice by destroying his office and going through files, to slicing up his art work and his favorite leather chair. Could that act possibly have anything to do with Tubby's case with Mr. Alvarez? The only way to find out is to read the story.

This is extremely fast-paced, which I enjoyed immensely and a short read, which made me love this story all the more. There are several little stories interwoven throughout and quite an enjoyable read. I'm looking forward to the rest of the series!
Profile Image for Tim.
137 reviews3 followers
June 14, 2014
Tubby Dubonnet is a New Orleans lawyer who tries to keep on the straight and narrow. He represents a wide range of characters in criminal court and when one of his clients gives him a gym bag to hold on to, things start to get interesting. Unfortunately, the client can't come and reclaim the bag.

This is the first in a series (and the second in the series that I have read). I liked this book because it was an engaging read with a good plot that has plenty of twists. The characters are introduced and enough back story is given to get the reader interested. I know from reading later in the series that this back story is more fully fleshed out in future novels.

Definitely recommended for those that like a good mystery/thriller without too much gore or violence (not that there isn't any gore or violence, it's just not gratuitous). I will continue to look for this series.
Profile Image for Randy.
469 reviews
July 11, 2015
An interesting plot with lots of surprises. I like Mr. Dunbar's writing style and how he develops his characters. This is the first of seven current books in the Tubby Dubonnet series, taking place in New Orleans. Tubby is an attorney with the usual protagonist issues (divorced, kids, drinking, gambling) and an assortment of friends and enemies and clients. Both the beautiful and seamy sides of New Orleans appear in the book. Amazon states that this is a humorous New Orleans mystery, but I found very little humor in it; however I did enjoy reading the story.
Profile Image for Wendy.
564 reviews18 followers
October 28, 2016
Crooked Man

Good book. I really enjoyed reading a book set in New Orleans that the people and places were so authentic. You can tell that the author is from the city. The story was also good enough that I will be reading the whole series and I'm sure it can only get better from here.
Profile Image for Liz.
30 reviews
March 7, 2016
The ending seemed a bit abrupt, but overall I enjoyed the book. It definitely made me laugh at some parts, which I enjoyed. I would probably read more of his books.
Profile Image for Jen.
232 reviews32 followers
April 15, 2018
My first Tubby Dubonnet mystery was actually the second in this series. Having read that one first inspired me to start reading this series from the beginning. Having read this - the first book in the series - second, I think, is the best way to do it. It is sort of like an epic where you are thrust in to the story line mid way with hints made to the character’s back story, and then this book fills in those backstory hints with actual backstory.

Crooked Man tells the story of how Tubby Dubonnet and his “missing” partner Reggie Turntide ended up with Mr. Turntide being missing. Unlike the second book in the series where the mystery happens around Tubby with him just being a casual observer, he takes a much more active and legally strategic role in this mystery… which isn’t much of a mystery. It is more of a thriller. There is really only one question, that being the question of who supplied some money, and that question was never answered. So, I don’t think it can be called a mystery.

That said, I did catch a continuity error! In the second book as well as in this book, Tubby talks with the praline woman near the jail and in both books he appears to learn for the first time that she’s hanging out nearby because her godson is in the jail. This has absolutely nothing to do with the plot of this book, but is just something recycled between books and reminded me a bit of the Space Odyssey series in the way that whole passages are placed in multiple books as if readers aren’t expected to notice. (minus one star; though I really should have taken the star from book two if I were following logic)

Also, I saw this lovely passage after finishing the narrative of the book:



I think this is a FABULOUS passage that ought to be provided to any and all eBooks whether self-published or not. How often do we readers comment about grammar or content errors in these book reviews for books we otherwise enjoyed? Imagine being paid to give future readers a better experience than we had? And with the book selling at around $5 a copy (although I got it for free via a kindle lend I nonetheless very much would pay this price), a $20 budget isn’t arduous. Aspiring authors … take note!

As for the end, I might have shopped around for better rates.
Profile Image for Jack.
332 reviews2 followers
February 9, 2019
I was born and raised in New Orleans. Well, born in NO and lived in Metairie, but whoever's heard of Metairie? I have no desire to go back in real life. Visiting in this book, however, has been a very enjoyable experience.

Maybe it's the murder.

Tubby Dubonnet is a not-really-seedy-but-not-totally-respectable lawyer in New Orleans, Louisiana. He has quite a few interesting characters as clients. One of them winds up dead in somewhat mysterious though not totally unexpected circumstances. The rest is too much spoiler for you.

Mr. Dunbar's style hooked me from the first paragraph. It's not the same, but it reminds me Toole's A Confederacy of Dunces in tone, or at least it reminds me of what I think the tone was from when I read it 30+ years ago (YIKES!). This is a fully-real city, and I can't deny the people might be straight off the streets. There is a good sense of who everybody is, even if it's just implied menace (and there's plenty of that to go around).

This was a very enjoyable read. My only real ding is there is no break between sections. A new scene starts, but it's just the next line in the book, no vertical space, no horizontal line. It made things jarring far more than once. But don't let that stop you - it didn't me. Well worth reading, and easy, too (I only had to look up one word!).

Highly recommended!

[Side Note: Reading this as part of a collection of the first five Tubby Dubonnet Mysteries in one Kindle edition. Yeah, I'm marking each book separately, not as one big book.]
Profile Image for Nancy.
1,347 reviews43 followers
July 3, 2019
I purchased a series of five Tubby Dubonnet books on a whim---loved the idea of a New Orleans series, and I used to have a fondness for Dubonnet "blonde" as an aperitif, so. . . . here we go. I think the books sat in my "to read" que for a few years until I started and finished the first volume in one sitting.

Dunbar may not be writing great literature, but he is writing an extremely entertaining and engaging kind of crime novel. I am a fan of film noir, and Tubby Dubonnet's first adventure was reminiscent of classic noir stories. Atmospheric. Layers and layers of bad guys. A good guy with just enough elasticity to make him interesting. And, a damsel in distress.

It is 110 degrees in the desert where I live and at this time of the year I am not searching for fine literature, I am looking to get lost in a fun book and that is precisely what Tony Dunbar offered me.
Now, I am off to open up volume two . . .. . .
Profile Image for Meg.
2,387 reviews34 followers
November 11, 2023
Fine for what it was, a free amazon book. Tubby is a lawyer who gets himself into hot water when his partner, Reggie, asks him to represent Darrel on a drug charge. Darrel asks him to hold a duffel bag for him and Tubby doesn’t look in it until Darrel ends up dead and he finds almost a million dollars in cash. Tubby knows that someone will be looking for the money so he tries to hide it and then he tries to spend it but before long the owners of the money come looking for it. Tubby agrees to meet to make the drop and lo and behold who shows up but his partner, Reggie. Turns out that Reggie is a bad guy and he set Tubby up and now he is going to take the cash and kill Tubby but Tubby gets to him first and buries him on a construction site. He turns the cash into a settlement for a medical malpractice suit that he is working on and takes his cut of $300,000 so he gets to keep at least some of the money.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Ricardo.
199 reviews9 followers
September 30, 2017
What this lawyer-turned-investigator caper story has going for itself is some colorful, non-stereotypical supporting characters and a good sense of place (New Orleans feels like a real-world city with a certain uniqueness, rather than the mysticism-laden, partygoer haven it so often gets limited to, as portrayals go). Tubby Dubonnet himself is not very stiffly defined, aside from being a professional (read: world-weary) lawyer who's more prone than most to actually help the neediest who come to him. I suppose I could give the second book in the series a try, at least to see whether Dubonnet gets fleshed out a bit more. But bear in mind I got the first two books as freebies and that fact certainly weighs in on the "reading time cost-benefit ratio".
62 reviews
December 7, 2022
As I start to read I just have to set the room so to speak. I sorta set each character in its own space away from everyone else and watch how they interact with each other. Building a web of sorts often from the detective or the victim. Well good luck with that..
I love the small spaces between the action that fills a character with style and routine of an ordinary life. This brings the story to the reader. You can also step from your day into the muck with just small simple unforseen events.This ride is free for all not the superspy or overall overachiever most definitely seam to want as the hero. The average working reader could be this character and you start to wonder what would be your next move?
577 reviews4 followers
November 20, 2017
Tubby gets himself in trouble just being a lawyer and putting a client's gym bag in the safe. Then the client gets killed. Well, the client owned a bar and wasn't exactly running for best man of the year. The client had a girlfriend, on probation from Alabama, running from an abusive husband. She also had a young daughter being watched by her mother back home. Add Tubby's law partner, a crooked sheriff, Tubby's family and friends, other lawyers and 'enforcers' and pile drivers and New Orleans, and you have a pretty good start to a series with Tubby as the star. Did I mention the performer with splotchy skin from a medical procedure?
Enjoy.
Profile Image for Marie.
135 reviews
December 24, 2017
I'm missing something. Maybe a plot? Maybe some interesting characters? Humor? Suspense? Any of those would have been fine, with me, but I had a hard time finding them here. Perhaps for the first in a series, it's not so bad, but it also didn't make me want to read more. The characters all felt very stock to me, the loose threads that tried to gather into a plot didn't quite pull together, the setting wasn't all that richly done given the glory that is New Orleans, and the dark humor wasn't very - dark or humorous. Set against the like of Chandler, McDonald, Julie Smith, or any of the other dozens of similar writers I read, this series just doesn't seem to make the cut.
Profile Image for Bruce McNair.
294 reviews2 followers
December 30, 2018
Tubby Dubonnet is a lawyer in New Orleans. His partner passes a client on to Tubby. But Tubby doesn’t realise that his new client is a drug runner. When he is caught handling a large amount of marijuana, the client gives Tubby a bag to look after. When the client is murdered and Tubby’s office ransacked, Tubby discovers that the bag contains almost a million dollars. The question is what is he to do with it and retain his moral and ethical standing? The solution could resolve more than one case he is handling.

I found this to be an interesting take on the crime genre with a touch of humour. I gave it 3.5 stars out of 5.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
95 reviews2 followers
November 2, 2020
Amazon has various ways a giving away ebooks. Most are not to my tastes, but some occasionally are tempting.
A set of Tony Dunbar's first five novels about Tubby Dubonnier, Esq. looked tasty. "Crooked Man" most certainly hit the spot. Set in New Orleans, one of the unique places in the USA, Tubby is just as exotic as his lighter and darker adventures, and NOLA itself.
Part of the fun are Tubby's excellent tastes in NOLA cuisine and beverages. Tubby's adventures are true NOLA Noir with more than enough of the Big Easy to make this fan of the Crescent City feel right at home. I've got four more of Tubby's adventures. I'll be backTubby, have the beignets and cafe au lait ready!
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
506 reviews3 followers
December 8, 2018
AN AWESOME READ!!

Crooked Man, is the first book, of The Tubby Dubonnet Series.
I ABSOLUTELY Love reading these books!! Lots of facts about New Orleans and it's multitude of characters!
Tubby is a Lawyer, who takes his clients to heart and tries his best to get the right results for them!!
In Crooked Man, he tries to help a bar owner, who was caught in a Law Enforcement sting. Mayhem abounds, can Tubby get the right results?? Guess you'll have to read this book, to find out!!
Profile Image for Diana Sandberg.
838 reviews
May 3, 2019
I'm filing this as a mystery, but only because I'm not sure what else to call it. It's certainly not a whodunit; people die, but there's no mystery about who or why. It's a very nicely done introduction to characters who will no doubt persist through the several volumes I have still to read. It has a film noir feeling, appropriate enough to the seamy-side-of-New-Orleans setting, but the grim bits are not too grim for queasy me. Our Hero, small-time lawyer Tubby Dubonnet, is amusing and, again, appropriately morally....ambiguous. Looking forward to reading more in this series.
Profile Image for John.
291 reviews
July 28, 2021
I got this book as part of a box set of the series from Amazon at a reduced price, and finally decided to have a read. I've decided to give a review to each book as I go along.
All up, it's a very good read. It has mystery, suspense and some humour, but I wouldn't call it 'cosy'. The author introduces each character well, and gradually entwines all the characters into each other very nicely. Well edited.
As far as I know, it's the first time I've read this author but, at this stage, I intended to continue reading the box set.
Recommended.
Profile Image for Gary Sedivy.
528 reviews6 followers
November 22, 2017
An easy read. Interesting main character - a lawyer. Now, Tubby (that’s his name) isn’t exactly crooked, but he’s not exactly squeaky clean either. The story has a lot characters, and since most of them are crooked, it’s a little tough to keep them straight. A couple of Tubby’s clients, though not involved in the main story, consume a significant portion of the novel. Not that they’re a diversion, but provide background fill for the sense of New Orleans.
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