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J.C. Bruce has been seeing Strange things happen and he’s delighted

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Naples Daily News

Staying home has given Southwest Florida a new appreciation for all things local. Two local authors have found that love being extended to them with books that have been published as the coronavirus developed. In fact, one of them is in print because the coronavirus developed. Meet authors Jeff Bruce and Ronnie Antik:

‘Florida Man’

J.C. Bruce has been seeing Strange things happen, and he’s delighted.

The Naples mystery writer, a former executive editor for the Naples Daily News, has been mining the life and times of his continuing protagonist, columnist Alex Strange, with new sagas nearly annually. Strange is a geographic mutt in the silver-white sunshine of Southwest Florida, and as he develops, his audience does as well, with reviews that have applause beginning to come in.

Bruce’s book, “Florida Man,” published in January, is his fourth in the Strange Files series. And as something of a prequel to Strange’s Florida adventures, it’s the perfect one for attention from grassroots groups. Says the national Online Book Club: “From the very beginning, I loved this book”; and Readers’ Favorite: “The plot flows flawlessly from the entrancing beginning to the smashing conclusion. … I can’t wait to meet up with Alexander again.”

“Florida Man” is a two-word sobriquet for the everyman victim/perpetrator in Florida’s inexhaustible supply of bizarre tales. Florida Man does things like throwing an alligator through a Wendy’s drive-in window or breaking into a farmers market in a tutu to steal fruit.

"Florida Man"

In the latest book, Strange has left his defunct Phoenix newspaper to take the enviable and exhausting job of documenting those tales for an online news service. But not before he entangles himself with a spiritual reader who already knows his history and a friend who is being blackmailed with deadly overtones.

“The two books that follow this book I actually wrote before ‘Florida Man,’ and it  occurred to me that I’d never told the story of how Alexander got from Arizona to Florida,” Bruce explained. “I mean, I knew the story but never told the story.”

In fact, he knows the movements of his character, Alex Strange, so well that Alex, under Bruce’s computer skills, even writes an occasional weird news blog for Bruce’s own author website. “He’s picking up a bit of a following,” said Bruce, pleased.

At least one of Bruce’s Alex Strange plots embarks from the free lodgings aboard his uncle’s boat, the Miss Demeanor, in Goodland (“Get Strange”); another story (“Strange Currents”) docks in Key West. Alex roams through Pelican Bay, Ochopee and other fascinating points of Florida in his sidetracked column quests. Any good editor would fire him for not producing enough copy.

He’s self-published but then, he says, “If you’re a new author, even if you’re published by one of the five publishing houses, under whatever title, you’re going to be responsible for your own marketing.”

Establishing his own publishing entity has become the promise of a second industry.  His Tropic Press is taking on other independent authors

“I have spent the last five years really trying to get a handle on the book publishing industry,” he said. International Thriller Writers Conference in New York. He met wonderful people and gleaned some good tips. But part of the education was about how mercurial the industry has become, with social media, e-books, podcasts biting off chunks of income and attention.

And then came the coronavirus restrictions. Book signings and festivals are out of the question. “And as every writer will tell you, THE single most important marketing tool you have is word of mouth.”

“There are a lot of different strategies, depending on what people like to do. My thinking is that I want to continue to write books. I want to send out books for reviews. Having that validation of people who will review the books and, hopefully, there’s good things to be said about them, will help create the basis for people being willing to take the risk of buying them.”

Even though he spent enough of his years in Ohio to develop an affection for the basement-dwelling Cincinnati Reds and was an editor at the Dayton Daily News, Bruce is a proud Florida native. His home state alternative frustrates and fascinates him.

“Florida has always been the last refuge for scoundrels and con men and grifters,” he said. “We’re crazier here — it’s warm year ’round so people can run around naked and do stupid stuff. There are easy ways to smuggle drugs in, and you can hide here effectively. People have sort of adopted the pirate mentality around here.”

He lets Alexander Strange say it best: “It’s the Candy Land for crazies.”

Neither Alex nor Bruce would want it any other way.

“Florida Man” and the other Strange Files series books are available via Barnes & Noble, iBooks, amazon.com and other bookstore chains.

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