Florida Palms

A Novel

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About The Book

The Outsiders meet Sons of Anarchy in this gripping debut about a group of young men dragged into a drug-running operation on the Space Coast of Florida.

It’s 2009, the height of the Great Recession. Best friends Eddy, Cueball, and Jesse are fresh out of high school and wild at heart, but the economy is in the dumps. With jobs scarce along Florida’s Space Coast, they join a furniture-moving company run by Cueball’s father, a gruff ex-con biker who’s supposedly retired from the fast life. But when a mysterious old boss arrives in town, the payload is switched out, and the young men are coerced into shipping a new designer drug up the East Coast.

What is advertised as a bastion of brotherhood and respect quickly spirals into back-alley deals, bloodshed, and an all-out turf war that will test the bounds of love and friendship. Enticed by larger paychecks, and fueled by burgeoning drug habits, the young friends find themselves trapped between rank opportunists, warring gangsters, meth zombies, crazed bikers, and a blowgun-wielding hitman, all vying for a shot at the big time.

Soaring, ambitious, and deeply humane, Florida Palms is a gritty coming-of-age story with enormous heart and an unflinching vision of the violence and inequities facing forgotten communities. In a relentless race against desperate circumstances, the young friends must fully embrace the crime life or abandon their loyalties and risk ending up face down in the muck of the unforgiving swamps.

Reading Group Guide

1) “It was survival-living dressed up as culture…” Florida Palms portrays working-class people eking out a tough existence in a small Space Coast town during the Great Recession. How does the economic instability of the region shape the characters’ moral choices, their relationships, and their sense of purpose as they struggle to make ends meet?

2) The book begins just after Eddy and Cueball have graduated high school and have begun working for Bird’s moving company. What futures are the boys imagining for themselves? What futures did you (or do you) imagine for yourself when you graduate(d) high school? What kind of lives do you think await young people like Cueball and Eddy today?

3) “We had something once…a code.” How does Del Ray’s lament define the outlaw identity? What did he feel was missing?

4) What bound these characters together most strongly at the beginning of the book—loyalty, love, proximity, shared morals, necessity, a sense of survival, or fear? Did this change by the end, and if so, for whom and how?

5) Family ties in Florida Palms are often fractured and imperfect; the same can be said for those personal bonds requiring fraught allegiances. How did Eddy’s difficult relationship with his mother and Cueball’s deeply flawed relationship with his father shape their lives and later play out in their other relationships?

6) Drugs and alcohol pervade the novel—are they used as forms of escapism, rebellion, coping, self-destruction? How does Pan portray the thin line between euphoria and ruin?

7) How did the lyrical descriptions of Florida’s landscape help develop the novel’s mood and atmosphere? Did this impact your reading of certain passages? Would you describe Florida as a character itself?

8) Del Ray delivered a few philosophical monologues in the book. Did you read these passages as moments of wisdom, self-mythology, delusion? Which passages or speeches lingered with you the most, and why?

9) What role did humor play in humanizing these morally gray characters?

10) Violence permeates the novel, from backwoods executions to Gumby’s brutal takedown of several characters. How does the casual presence of violence shape the atmosphere of Palm Bay? Were there moments you found especially unsettling or illuminating? Analyze how violence escalates in the novel—when is it depicted as senseless, ritualized, necessary, or redemptive?

11) Discuss how ideas surrounding masculinity were illustrated in the creation of the Armstrong Crew. Were the elder club leaders more mentors or manipulators? How does Pan balance sympathy for these characters with critiques of them?

12) Discuss how Eddy evolves across the five parts of the novel—from drifting son to reluctant participant to regime crony to forced outsider. Locate the moments where we witness the transformations happen—are these moments erosions of Eddy’s moral compass or necessary obstacles on his journey into manhood?

13) In an earlier conversation, Gin said she believed “people never changed,” while Eddy thinks people “eventually find their way.” Who do you think is more right by the end of the book?

14) In the end, what does Florida Palms seem to say about power structures and capitalism? Do any characters successfully escape their origins? Do they find something better than before?

15) Which character arc or moment in the book affected you most? Did the ending leave you with a sense of closure, unease, or something else?

About The Author

Wendy Millar

Joe Pan is the author of five poetry books and founder of Brooklyn Arts Press, one of the smallest independent houses ever honored with a National Book Award in Poetry, and publisher of Augury Books, honored with a Lambda Literary Award in Lesbian Poetry. His writing has appeared in the Boston Review, Hyperallergic, The New York Times, and Poets & Writers, and he’s been profiled by Publishers Weekly, The Rumpus, and The Wall Street Journal. He grew up along the Space Coast of Florida and now lives in Los Angeles. With his wife he cofounded BAH, an activist group that serves unhoused populations with sleeping bags and goods. Florida Palms is his debut novel. 

Product Details

  • Publisher: Simon & Schuster (July 22, 2025)
  • Length: 480 pages
  • ISBN13: 9781668052181

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Raves and Reviews

A New York Times Editor's Choice
One of CrimeReads's, Sun Sentinel's, and Library Journal's Best Books of 2025


"A musky, Florida-specific stew of sweat, blood, swamp gas and amphetamine addiction."—The New York Times

"Award-winning poet Joe Pan confidently delivers an uncompromising look at the criminal underworld of Central Florida...Florida Palms ushers in a new talent."Sun Sentinel

"Transfixing...A must-read. Pan’s intense drama has a Sons of Anarchy vibe but with a greater pathos."Library Journal (starred)

"If Florida is purgatory with a sun, Florida Palms exposes what happens to the young men who grow up in the shadows—a tightly plotted page-turner filled with gangsters, brotherhood, and betrayal. Joe Pan is an extraordinarily skilled writer, but his genius is his empathy, understanding that good people sometimes do bad things. What if you turned eighteen in the wrong neighborhood and found yourself surrounded by drug dealers, bikers, and eccentric hitmen? These are characters no reader will forget."—Alexander Boldizar, author of The Man Who Saw Seconds

Florida Palms offers up a crew of freewheeling philosophers on bikes, whose cynicism and violence—and the bizarre, hilarious screeds by which they justify themselves—are counterbalanced by the naive, heartbreaking humanity of the young men swept along in their wake. Pan’s love for Florida and its rougher, neglected corners is evident and intoxicating.”—Stephanie Soileau, author of Last One Out Shut Off the Lights

“Thrilling, suspenseful, and intricately plotted, Florida Palms shines an unsparing light on the tenuous, violent lives of young men trying to survive in a world that does not want—or see—them. Joe Pan, writing with urgency, vision, and uncommon empathy, does not turn away from these fractured and fragile lives, and neither should we.”—Elizabeth Wetmore, New York Times Bestselling author of Valentine

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