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Is there such a thing as a tiki novel?

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The Tiki's of Madison County

Debbi Does Tiki

50 First Tiki's

On 2004-07-30 22:04, Tiki_Bong wrote:
"Hey, I've got it gang, we'll rent the old barn down at Keller's place, and put on a big show..."
Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland-esque isn't it?

With the excellent leadership skills from Bong A'Rooney,(with the exception of the cow castrations) the hoedown at Keller's was a tremendous success.

[ Edited by: Unga Bunga on 2004-08-04 14:04 ]

lol Unga -- and rotf'ing too (rolling on the floor) ...

Tiki Bong vows to get the Tiki Writers' Group's little dog, too!

T

Just a realist folks. Prove me wrong by actually producing your product by your said date of December '04.

UB

Ya know we love ya Bong.
(in a straight way)

The Tiki Writers Group knows they ain't headin' for bombsville!

I had come to Tiki Central just to ask this question..the internet is filled with books about tiki culture and how to create it in your man cave and pool house..but I am looking for novels which SMACK of sun and sand and RUM.

I have cobbled together a short list of things i have read or stumbled over
but it is a sad little list and I am dead certain there MUST be more novels
out there that smack of Tiki-ness.

And I challenge the folks who read this post to come up with some more and BETTER examples of the ultimate in beach reads.

Island of the Sequined Love Nun by Christopher Moore
The Moon And Sixpence by W. Somerset Maugham
Tales of the South Pacific by James A. Michener
Paradise News by David Lodge
A Salty Piece of Land by Jimmy Buffett
Don't Stop the Carnival by Herman Wouk
Tourist Season by Carl Hiaasen
Hotel Honolulu by Paul Theroux
Tiki Joe Mysteries: The High-Stakes Patsy by Mark Murphy

C

Not really directly relevant to the kind of beach read for which the immediately preceeding poster is looking, but the brand new It Came from Hanger 18, authored by Forbidden Island event manager Will "the Thrill" Viharo and FI regular Scott Fulks, is completely stuffed with tiki imagery. The "lead" character is a tiki god and the novel opens in FI, before wandering through space and time and dimensions. Good read also, especially for those of us who live on the Pacific island of Alameda and appreciate the local references, but still good for mainlanders as well.

"Murder On Tiki Island" by Tiki Chris Pinto has it all, and then some.

Pages: 1 2 56 replies