The hedonists' hotel

A trust-fund baby wakes up one day to find that the only thing left in his possession is a crumbling hotel in South Beach filled with hedonists.

By CHAUNCEY MABE, South Florida Sun-Sentinel

March 12, 2008 at 6:12PM
South Beach: The Novel (Star Tribune/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

In his first novel in 14 years, Brian Antoni proves that the ingredients for fantasy need not include hobbits, witches, vampires or any mythical creature or supernatural event. Instead, realistic characters in real places can be equally magical under the right narrative spell.

This seems the aesthetic Antoni has chosen for "South Beach: The Novel" (Black Cat, $14), a frothy chronicle of the early '90s rise of its title hot spot, viewed through the lives of the varied residents of a rundown deco hotel.

Among these fantastic creatures: a gorgeous transsexual lipsyncher with no voice of her own, a cynical gossip columnist dying of AIDS, an elderly Holocaust survivor working for the Mob, a performance artist in flight from a bitter divorce and early success in New York, a famous designer with bad taste and extravagant passion for beautiful men and a Cuban rafter who becomes the hottest model in town.

At the center is the novel's most ordinary character, Gabriel Tucker, a 29-year-old trust-fund baby who wakes up in Tokyo one morning to find he is suddenly bankrupt except for an old hotel called the Venus de Milo Arms, inherited years earlier from his grandfather. After a decade aimlessly wandering the world's glamour spots, Gabriel makes his first visit to Miami Beach to see what can be salvaged of his life and finances.

He finds South Beach in continual flux, still home to elderly Jews, poor-but-driven artists, and a blossoming hedonistic club scene. The inevitable celebrity infestation lies just around the corner. Meanwhile, local and international developers jockey ruthlessly to buy up and tear down the old deco buildings in favor of towering luxury condos.

As unlikely as it might seem, this hedonic existence gradually brings out Gabriel's humanity, as he forges real relationships for the first time. And he gains purpose by resisting exorbitant offers to sell the hotel, struggles to restore it and make it pay, and becomes involved in the movement to spare the deco buildings from the wrecking ball.

Antoni might easily have written a big, dense "city novel." But there is an undeniable aptness to his decision to turn the story into a neon fantasy, for perhaps fantasy best reflects the reality of a place like South Beach. He makes the most of it: All the major characters are beautiful, talented, incredibly lucky, and despite their bad habits, good at heart. Through various reversals and conflicts, they make us care about them as they wend toward a fairy-tale ending.

about the writer

about the writer

CHAUNCEY MABE, South Florida Sun-Sentinel