‘Trap Line' by Bill Montalbano and Carl Hiaasen is a good crime thriller. It was published in 1982, but I doubt the culture of the Florida Keys has changed very much from how it is presented in the novel. However, there is no satire in this story which experienced readers of books by Hiaasen have learned to expect! The writers have a different kind of tone in mind, a serious one. Lives are changed forever by bad people.
I've copied the cover blurb below because it is an accurate description of the novel:
With its dozens of outlying islands and the native Conchs’ historically low regard for the law, Key West is a smuggler’s paradise. All that’s needed are the captains to run the contraband. Breeze Albury is one of the best fishing captains on the Rock, and he’s in no mood to become the Machine’s delivery boy. So the Machine sets out to persuade him. It starts out by taking away Albury’s livelihood. Then it robs him of his freedom. But when the Machine threatens Albury’s son, the washed-out wharf rat turns into a raging, sea-going vigilante.
In Trap Line, Hiaasen and Montalbano pit a handful of scruffy Conchs against an armada of drug lords, crooked cops, and homicidal marine lowlife. The result is a crime novel of dizzying velocity, filled with wrenching plot twists, grimily authentic characters, and enough local color for a hundred tropical shirts. It’s the Key West the tourist brochures won’t tell you about: a place as crooked as Al Capone’s Chicago and as irredeemably violent as Wyatt Earp’s Tombstone.
"Conch" is a term for Key West-born locals.
'Trap Line' is a great beach read, even if that beach is in Florida - unless readers discover themselves in the middle of a gun shootout between drug dealers and honest Florida folk, or get caught up in an arrest by a corrupt police officer fronting for a Florida politician on the payroll of competing local drug lords! Well. I'm sure these novels based on real Florida crime exaggerate...