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Crooked Man: A Hard-Boiled but Humorous New Orleans Mystery (Tubby Dubonnet Series #1) (The Tubby Dubonnet Series) Kindle Edition

4.0 out of 5 stars 3,669 ratings

IF A GYM BAG OF CASH FELL INTO YOUR HANDS, WHAT WOULD YOU DO TO KEEP IT?

The FIRST offbeat mystery in the TUBBY DUBONNET series by Anthony- and Edgar-nominated author Tony Dunbar. A simple man with a refined palate, maverick New Orleans lawyer Tubby Dubonnet has a penchant for fishing, Old Fashioneds, off-track betting, and fighting evil while passing a good time.

His clients are all renegades from the asylum (aka Orleans Parish), including a transvestite entertainer, a buxom deadbeat blonde, a doctor who refers his own patients to a malpractice lawyer, and a Mardi Gras reveler who drives a float shaped like a giant crawfish pot. He also has his hands full with an ex-wife and three teenage daughters, who are experts in the art of wrapping Tubby around their little fingers.

And somehow, between work and family, Tubby finds time to sample the highs and lows of idiosyncratic Crescent City cuisine, from trout meuniere amandine and French roast coffee with chicory to shrimp po-boys and homemade pecan pralines.
Tubby's new client is Darryl Alvarez, the manager of a local nightclub who's been caught unloading marijuana from a shrimp boat.

At their first meeting, Darryl entrusts Tubby with an ordinary-looking blue gym bag. But after Darryl's unfortunate demise, Tubby realizes he must tighten his grasp on the gym bag—and its million-dollar contents.
Tubby can’t just give up the cash. But if he gets caught, he’ll be in jail. And if the wrong people catch him, he’ll wish he was.

Excerpt:
The pain that said he was drinking too much started creeping up behind Tubby’s ears. Raisin Partlow, his drinking buddy, had given up trying to make conversation and was puffing on a cigarette in the exaggerated way that irregular smokers do. The dusty, barely lit tavern was thinning out, leaving just a few whiskered pool players chalking up a last game and a pair of busty girls sharing confidences with the even heftier dame behind the bar.
“Never screw a client and never lie to the judge,” Tubby said abruptly.
It took Raisin a second to break through to the surface.
“What’s that?” he asked.
“That’s all of the so-called legal ethics that make sense to me. The rest of it is just so many little rules you can twist around to suit whatever you want to do.”
“Well, you know, Tubby, I lied to a judge just last week.” Raisin expelled a wobbly smoke ring and smiled in satisfaction. “Old ‘Fuzzy’ Bear appointed me to represent the fool who shot a fourteen-year-old girl, after he raped her and her mother. He asks me, ‘Mr. Partlow, can you put aside your personal feelings and represent this man to the best of your goddamn abilities?’”
The bartender broke off her conversation to look in their direction. Tubby raised his fingers an inch off the scarred oak surface, so cool to the touch, and shook his head, no. The familiar pain of too much whiskey and too much Coca-Cola had already spread over to the top of his skull.
“What did you tell him?”
“I told him, ‘Yes, Your Honor. The man deserves his day in court.’ I should have told him, ‘Fuck no, Judge. I hate this guy. Take him away where I don’t have to look at him. I’ll be embarrassed to admit to my godchildren that I was even in the same room with the guy.’ But I knew that was the wrong answer to the question.”
“You should have told him the truth,” Tubby said.
“Like what?”
“You should have said, ‘Heck no, Judge. But I’ll do a better job than anybody else you’re likely to get.”
Raisin shrugged and waved at the bartender. Tubby slid off his stool and grabbed the bar for support.
“I’m out of here,” he said.
Raisin looked concerned about being left alone.
“Let me buy you one more,” he said.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Dunbar's (Delta Time) first novel is less a mystery-the murder occurs at the halfway point and is witnessed by the reader-than a deliciously witty caper through the idiosyncratic landscape of New Orleans, where crickets sing in the weeds that grow up through the curbs and St. Patrick's Day paraders toss crawfish and potatoes from floats. Tubby Dubonnet is a lawyer who likes fishing, beer and off-track betting. His clients include a cross-dresser referred by the very doctor he's suing for a botched skin-creolizing, and a lakefront bar owner who has held on to a nearly $1 million payoff after a shrimpboat marijuana bust. The bar owner hands over the money locked in a gym bag to Tubby, then is murdered, leaving behind a death scene portrayed with jarring comic understatement. Tubby grapples with the temptation of riches and the threats of claimants, and, as he sorts out the rogues from and among the buttoned-downs, he dispatches the villain and finds a home for the cash in a conclusion that's as cleverly convoluted and amusing as the rest of this tale, the first in a projected series.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal

Best known for his nonfiction work (e.g., Delta Time: A Journey Through Mississippi, LJ 7/90), Dunbar creates a lighthearted, fast-moving, comic mystery with New Orleans lawyer and epicure Tubby Dubonnet as the hero. One would think that Tubby's professional life is interesting, given his involvement with a transvestite/entertainer client who's suing for a botched skin-darkening operation (he was referred to Tubby by his doctor, the defendant!). Alas, Tubby finds himself in possession of a gym bag full of cash that may be tied to a drug-deal-gone-sour murder. There are certainly others who will stop at nothing to obtain the bag. Are they underworld or are they from the "right" side of the law? In this well-written, entertaining first novel, Tubby's luncheon menus are as engaging as the plot. Highly recommended for public libraries.
Heather Blenkinsopp, Mercy Coll. Lib., Dobbs Ferry, N.Y.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0081HNT7U
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ booksBnimble (November 29, 2013)
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ November 29, 2013
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 1.8 MB
  • Simultaneous device usage ‏ : ‎ Unlimited
  • Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 148 pages
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.0 out of 5 stars 3,669 ratings

About the author

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Tony Dunbar
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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, and…

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.

Customer reviews

4 out of 5 stars
3,669 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers find the book's well-thought-out plot and fast-paced narrative engaging, with a colorful cast of characters and a mix of mystery and humor. The New Orleans setting brings the city to life, and customers appreciate the detailed descriptions of local cuisine. While many customers enjoy the book, some find it not very compelling.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

471 customers mention "Enjoyment"437 positive34 negative

Customers find the book entertaining and well-thought-out, with a winding and compelling plot that makes for great easy reading.

"Very interesting book. Never thought the ending would be what it is. Highly recommend this book. So many people involved with this book." Read more

"...​At the end, though, everything is good and right, a sort of justice prevails, the Alabama girl gets a new lease on life and Tubby is richer by $..." Read more

"...And the rest of the characters? Most were offbeat and charming in their own way. I'd equate this to a Hamish MacBeth novel by M.C. Beaton...." Read more

"...to that, everything moved along splendidly and the well-thought-out plot is quite enjoyable...." Read more

233 customers mention "Pacing"172 positive61 negative

Customers enjoy the book's pacing, describing it as a fast-paced read with smooth, easy-to-read writing. One customer notes that the story can be read out of order.

"...the city offers on the surface of day-to-day life and expertly navigates in the seedy, corrupt and dangerous undercurrents, somehow always doing the..." Read more

"...This book, this author: they're the good stuff. It flows so well, so smoothly, but you know it takes true writing talent to make something so hard..." Read more

"...spaces between paragraphs - but once I got used to that, everything moved along splendidly and the well-thought-out plot is quite enjoyable...." Read more

"...An ongoing problem had to do with the formatting. Scenes changed suddenly, and it slowed me down, having to go back and check which characters are..." Read more

174 customers mention "Character development"159 positive15 negative

Customers enjoy the colorful cast of characters in the book, particularly finding the main character Tubby intriguing.

"...There are also a few new and colorful characters, seemingly totally out of the blue...." Read more

"...I thought Tubby Dubonnet was a pretty likeable character who was realistic when you consider New Orleans culture. And the rest of the characters?..." Read more

"...The tale is well defined, the lawyerize not overwhelming, and the characters awesome...." Read more

"...So, engaging read. Cool plot, nice twists. Enjoyable characters, even if most of them were not investigated very deeply...." Read more

81 customers mention "Humor"73 positive8 negative

Customers enjoy the book's mix of mystery and humor, describing it as deliciously sarcastic and creative in its wordplay.

"...I enjoyed it. Very fast. Funny. Tubby's judgements are questionable but he aims to please." Read more

"I chose to read this tale for a couple of reasons. It was a mystery. It was set in New Orleans and it was supposed to be funny...." Read more

"...Funny, well-constructed, and many beignet moments scattered throughout raise these stores well above your average notch...." Read more

"...I’ll read all these Tubby Dubonnet books! Light hearted mystery!!" Read more

36 customers mention "Knowledge of new orleans"36 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate how the book brings New Orleans to life, with one customer noting that the setting is conducive to complicated matters.

"...the sounds, the tastes, and aromas of this unique place, a true national treasure, that puts Louisiana on the map of a "must visit" on a..." Read more

"...Dunbar knows New Orleans well, and peoples his books with fascinating characters you'd be likely (if unfortunate in some cases) to meet on the..." Read more

"...New Orleans setting was colorful and created a nice visit. The story was pretty good. The pacing was off kilter in spots...." Read more

"...It also has two very likeable, empathetic characters and New Orleans as a back drop, with all its distinctive culture and color...." Read more

25 customers mention "Color"25 positive0 negative

Customers enjoy the New Orleans setting of the book, finding it colorful and interesting, with one customer noting that the descriptions are accurate and vivid.

"...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...." Read more

"...The New Orleans backdrop is interesting, but the constant mentions of restaurants gets a little tiring...." Read more

"The character of Tubby is intriguing and likeable. New Orleans setting was colorful and created a nice visit. The story was pretty good...." Read more

"...I adore the setting of New Orleans and like the way Dunbar sprinkles food references in the story...." Read more

25 customers mention "Taste"23 positive2 negative

Customers love the food in the book and appreciate how it captures the local flavor, with one customer comparing it to a fine bowl of gumbo, while another describes it as a wonderful slice of New Orleans.

"...Every page of Dunbar’s narrative drips the sounds, the tastes, and aromas of this unique place, a true national treasure, that puts Louisiana on the..." Read more

"...atmosphere of New Orleans with it sunshine and humidity, it's great food and its ambience of the motto,"Let the Good Times Roll."..." Read more

"...adds it's very own spice and appeal, and you get a description of each delicious meal Tubby eats. Yum. You just can't go wrong with this series...." Read more

"...A splash of NO flair in the people, the food and the problems the city deals with on a daily basis. Hard to put down." Read more

40 customers mention "Interest"10 positive30 negative

Customers find the book unengaging, describing it as bland and not worth the read.

"...This isn't a fantastic book, but it's a pretty enjoyable one. It captures New Orleans and its corruption and good ole boyness quite well...." Read more

"...is what I'd call laid back, with rather ho-hum dialogue and not much real action..." Read more

"...of clients and friends, which are larger than life and keep your interest and attention. Great read." Read more

"...Enjoyable characters, even if most of them were not investigated very deeply. But this is a caper, not a psychological drama...." Read more

Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on March 23, 2025
    Very interesting book. Never thought the ending would be what it is. Highly recommend this book. So many people involved with this book.
  • Reviewed in the United States on June 15, 2016
    Everyone who has at least a small place in their heart for New Orleans, a "sine qua non" American experience, would be charmed reading Tony Dunbar’s mysteries of Tubby Dubonnet. Tubby, is a New Orleans lawyer who enjoys what the city offers on the surface of day-to-day life and expertly navigates in the seedy, corrupt and dangerous undercurrents, somehow always doing the right thing and saving his own life.
    Every page of Dunbar’s narrative drips the sounds, the tastes, and aromas of this unique place, a true national treasure, that puts Louisiana on the map of a "must visit" on a universal scale.
    Crooked Man is not different in this regard. But being a reader of Tubby’s previous tales: City of Beads, Crime Czar, Lucky Man, and especially my first encounter with Dunbar, Night Watchman, I cannot escape the feeling that I am watching the last Pink Panther movie which was put together from clips left on the editing floor from previous versions, after the passing of Peter Sellers. Everything is there but nothing compares to the ones that the comedian great starred in.
    Yes, Café du Monde and the smell of chicory-laced coffee is in the air, as well as Antoine’s oysters (an establishment, owned and operated by the same family since the 1800’s) and Galatoire’s downstairs dining as well as the po’boy places from which Dubonnet’s secretary brings his "in office" lunch are there. Just as much as the other familiar characters: the crooked and corrupt New Orleans Parish sheriff, Mulé, Hughes, his honor, Tubby’s black judge friend, Adrian the Giant Mudbug, his partner, Reggie, his ex-wife with whom he has a totally unexpected [moments of?] bliss and his three daughters, always the cause of a burning crisis and money trouble.
    There are also a few new and colorful characters, seemingly totally out of the blue. A Hispanic successful bar owner, not-so-successful drug smuggler, in, up to his ears, with some mysterious bosses. And an Alabama country girl, abused wife, runaway, waitress, barmaid, call girl, occasional hooker, who happens to be as righteous and honest as anybody may think of.
    But the story is not there. Instead of it, it is snippets of tales, seemingly disjoint and l’twist pour l’twists. The main story line is never clear on who is behind all this and how come they lost control on what has been happening, right at the "bakery." (Do you still remember Laugh In?)
    ​At the end, though, everything is good and right, a sort of justice prevails, the Alabama girl gets a new lease on life and Tubby is richer by $300,000 and a clean conscience. Exactly like the last Pink Panther.
    4 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on July 3, 2012
    About 30 percent into this book in my Kindle, I thought, "OK, the main character's charming, but where's the mystery?" I decided I was interested enough in all the characters to give the book a little more time, and I was glad I did.

    This isn't a fantastic book, but it's a pretty enjoyable one. It captures New Orleans and its corruption and good ole boyness quite well. I thought Tubby Dubonnet was a pretty likeable character who was realistic when you consider New Orleans culture. And the rest of the characters? Most were offbeat and charming in their own way.

    I'd equate this to a Hamish MacBeth novel by M.C. Beaton. You read them because you find the entire cast quirky and fun, not because the mystery's hard-hitting and fast paced. And after a while, you realize you've read nearly all of the series.
    90 people found this helpful
    Report
  • Reviewed in the United States on May 17, 2017
    I read a lot. And I find that a lot of writers with some talent and work publish a lot of forgettable stuff, as well as a lot of stuff simply not worth reading. Poorly-drawn characters, clumsy plots, awkward narrative trying to populate clumsy plots with those 2-dimensional characters so they work; they rarely do. So I sigh & within a day or two, forget the whole sad experience. I tell you that his because when I find an exception to this, it is extremely satisfying. When I pick up a book and keep reading "just a little more," when I find it is 3 a.m. And my eyes are closing but I want to keep reading because the story and how it is told are just so GOOD. These characters seem real but not predictable. This plot turns and twists but never goes off the rails. On finishing this book, I feel fully satisfied, yet hate for this excellent tale to end. This book, this author: they're the good stuff. It flows so well, so smoothly, but you know it takes true writing talent to make something so hard look so easy.
    13 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on 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!
    One person found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

  • jenn
    4.0 out of 5 stars I really did enjoy Tubby. Although he is a bit of a ...
    Reviewed in Australia on April 27, 2016
    I really did enjoy Tubby. Although he is a bit of a rogue he is also a likable protagonist.
  • Forensic1964
    5.0 out of 5 stars Great read!
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on February 23, 2019
    Bought this as a series thinking it might be ok until I found something else. BUT, I couldn't wait to keep reading! The plot was well thought-out and all loose ends were satisfyingly brought together. Highly recommend this book.
  • CJ
    5.0 out of 5 stars There are corporate lawyers, shisters, then there's Tubby
    Reviewed in Canada on June 23, 2021
    Tubby is basically a good and honest lawyer. This was a nice read and enjoyable story. It's not a Grisham novel but it was still well worth my time to read it.
  • John Willson
    4.0 out of 5 stars A fun, lighthearted noir
    Reviewed in Canada on January 3, 2015
    Crooked Man starts out strangely undramatic, but cruises along just fine on its likeable characters (of which New Orleans is one). Tension increases with page count, and the resolution is very satisfying. I look forward to reading more of Tubby.
  • Kindle Customer
    2.0 out of 5 stars Disappointing
    Reviewed in Australia on September 17, 2017
    This book is very slow. The only part that holds your attention is in the last 4 chapters. The story seems to be all over the place

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