Praise for The Bones of Wolfe:
“Hold on to your hats. The Wolfe family saga continues in Blake’s newest Border Noir…An action-packed story of family loyalties with some surprisingly sentimental undertones.”—Kirkus Reviews
“In the vein of a Thomas Perry caper novel, with plenty of blood. As such, it is never less than thoroughly entertaining.”—Booklist
“Series fans will enjoy this entertaining adventure.”—Publishers Weekly
Praise for James Carlos Blake:
“You must read James Carlos Blake’s books…every page, every paragraph, every book is a gem…A dark, beautiful slice of border noir.”—Bookreporter, on The Ways of Wolfe
“The Ways of Wolfe exhibits James Carlos Blake’s hallmark fast-paced, pummeling style…A rewarding, vividly wrought, gripping ride.”—Arizona Daily Star, on The Ways of Wolfe
“James Carlos Blake has long been one of my favorites, but his Wolfe family saga may be his best work to date . . . Brilliant and uncompromising, Blake again proves why he’s one of the best writers working today.”—Ace Atkins, on The House of Wolfe
“A writer with as many fine and wonderful skills as those possessed by James Carlos Blake should be well-known and embraced.”—Daniel Woodrell, on The House of Wolfe
“Suspenseful . . . Readers who enjoy action, adventure and lethal weaponry will relish every moment.”—Washington Post, on The Rules of Wolfe
“[Blake] writes of grisly death and violence like a singing Gaelic bard . . . [A] tough, honed-to-the-bone thriller.”—Dallas Morning News, on The Rules of Wolfe
“A hard-edged, fast-moving thriller that will hold your attention hostage—good luck getting away.”—Booklist (starred review), on The House of Wolfe
04/13/2020
At the start of Blake’s rollicking, if somewhat familiar, fifth Border Noir (after 2017’s The Ways of Wolfe), Eddie Gato Wolfe and a small crew aboard a boat in the Gulf of Mexico deliver a shipment of guns to members of the Mexican branch of the Wolfe clan for delivery to the Los Zetas cartel. The Mexican crew takes possession of the guns, only to be ambushed and slaughtered once ashore. The Wolfes quickly root out the culprit, an upstart rival gang member hoping to gain favor by giving the stolen guns to El Chubasco, the notorious head of the Sinaloan cartel. When the Wolfes recover the stolen guns from the rival gang member, they find a cache of upscale pornographic DVDs along with the guns. Kitty Quick, an actor in one of the flicks, bears an uncanny resemblance to 115-year-old Wolfe family matriarch Aunt Catalina’s long-lost sister, Sandra. Could Quick be a distant Wolfe relative? The grand dame thinks so, and sends a group of Wolfes to extricate her from the clutches of El Chubasco in a rescue operation that’s a bit of a retread from an earlier novel. Though it’s not up to Blake’s usual high standard, series fans will enjoy this entertaining adventure. Agent: Nat Sobel, Sobel Weber Assoc. (July)
2020-05-04
Hold on to your hats. The Wolfe family saga continues in Blake’s newest Border Noir.
The Wolfes run many legitimate businesses on both sides of the Mexican border, but smuggling is deeply ingrained in the family’s history. When a delivery of weapons to Mexico is hijacked and several family members are killed, brothers Rudy and Frank Wolfe and their cousins Rayo and Jessie, all of them involved in the family business, resolve to get revenge and recover the shipment. The brothers, field agents for the family law firm, track down witnesses. Along the way, they pick up a box of porn movies, and when Rayo and Jessie barge in while they’re screening them, Jessie asks her Uncle Charlie to make a few black-and-white stills of one of the girls in the film because she’s recognized “Kitty Quick” as the spitting image of Sandra Little, the long-missing sister of family doyenne Aunt Cat. Now 115, Cat, who looks and acts 30 years younger, has allowed Jessie to write her life story, which she expects to be published after her death. After seeing the photos, Aunt Cat sends Rudy, Frank, and Rayo on a quest to track down Kitty and bring her to Cat, who claims that she’ll know whether they’re related. Drawing on the family resources, they start their search in Tucson, the home address of the film company, but discover that Kitty’s already moved back to LA. Her agent says she’s gone to Mexico with a wealthy man. Therein lies the rub, for the man is El Chubasco, a violent drug lord who’s not likely to give her up. Undaunted, the three dig deeper into the family network to plot a rescue fraught with violence and danger.
An action-packed story of family loyalties with some surprisingly sentimental undertones.