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The house of Wolves [text (large print)] : murder runs in the family / James Patterson & Mike Lupica.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublisher: New York, NY : Little, Brown and Company, 2023Copyright date: ©2023Edition: Large print edition, First editionDescription: 485 pages (large print) ; 24 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9780316530934
  • 031653093X
Other title:
  • Murder runs in the family
Subject(s): Genre/Form: DDC classification:
  • 813/.54 23
Summary: The Wolfs, the most powerful family in California, have a new head-thirty-six-year-old former high school teacher Jenny Wolf. That means Jenny now runs the prestigious San Francisco Tribune. She also controls the legendary pro football team, the Wolves. And she hopes to solve her father's murder.
List(s) this item appears in: New Large Print Additions
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Shelving location Call number Status Notes Date due Barcode Item holds
Adult Book Phillipsburg Free Public Library Large Type Collection New Books LT PAT Available pap ed. 36748002544981
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

Instant New York Times Bestseller!



James Patterson and Mike Lupica are the thriller dream team! Jenny Wolf's murdered father leaves her in charge of a billion-dollar empire--and a family more ruthless than Succession' s Roys and Yellowstone 's Duttons.



The Wolfs, the most powerful family in California, have a new head-thirty-six-year-old former high school teacher Jenny Wolf.



That means Jenny now runs the prestigious San Francisco Tribune .



She also controls the legendary pro football team, the Wolves.



And she has a murdered father to avenge--if she can survive the killers all around her.



An unforgettable family drama by two writers at the top of their craft.



Subtitle from cover.

The Wolfs, the most powerful family in California, have a new head-thirty-six-year-old former high school teacher Jenny Wolf. That means Jenny now runs the prestigious San Francisco Tribune. She also controls the legendary pro football team, the Wolves. And she hopes to solve her father's murder.

Reviews provided by Syndetics

Library Journal Review

Following up their last outing, The Horsewoman, the Patterson/Lupica team introduce readers to California's powerhouse family, the Wolfs. Mid-thirties Jenny is now in charge, running the San Francisco Tribune and the professional football team, the Wolves, while looking into her father's murder. But her three brothers are plotting her overthrow. With a 400,000-copy first printing.

Publishers Weekly Review

Bestseller Patterson and Lupica's fast-paced if faltering sequel to 2021's The Horsewoman centers on the Wolf family, whose dominance of San Francisco is imperiled after patriarch Joe falls off his boat in San Francisco Bay and apparently drowns. The autopsy reveals both an elevated blood alcohol level and that Joe suffered a heart attack after entering the water. Given the number and power of Joe's many enemies, his daughter, Jenny, suspects her father was murdered. Her pursuit of that possibility comes as her life undergoes a dramatic shift. Joe's will leaves her in charge of his chief assets: the Wolves, an NFL franchise (whose aging star quarterback is Jenny's ex-husband), and the Tribune newspaper. That rankles her two brothers, who've been running the team and the paper, respectively, and vow to resist her takeover by fighting dirty if necessary. More deaths follow as Jenny falls for someone she shouldn't, wrestles with fulfilling her father's wishes, and tries to find his killer while still coaching a high school football team. Readers should be prepared for predictable plot twists and superficial characters. Those expecting the nuances and depth of family business dramas such as HBO's Succession will be disappointed. Agent: Robert Barnett, Williams & Connolly. (Jan.)

Booklist Review

Meet Jenny Wolf: high-school teacher, football coach. And now, due to her father's unexpected death, she controls the family's financial interests, which include, among other things, a pro football team and a venerable newspaper. Managing the family's finances while trying to deal with family politics is stressful enough, without the added pressure of finding out who's responsible for her father's death. The authors combine mystery and family drama in this entertaining novel--sportswriter and novelist Lupica's second collaboration with Patterson, following 2021's The Horsewoman. Lately Patterson's novels have been hit or miss, depending largely on his coauthor, and this one is a modest hit. It's not, perhaps, as compelling as it could have been, given Lupica's talent and his wide-ranging knowledge of the sports world. However, the authors keep the reader interested by employing a likable first-person narrator, Patterson's signature short chapters, and some clever surprises. Flawed but definitely worth a read.
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