Newspaper writer, family man, and reluctant hero Zack Walker has stumbled onto some dicey stories before, but nothing like what he’s about to uncover when a mutilated corpse is found at his father’s lakeside fishing camp. As always, Zack fears the worst. And this time, his paranoid worldview is dead-on.
While the locals attribute the death to a bear attack, Zack suspects something far more ominous—a predator whose weapons include arson, assault, and enough wacko beliefs to fuel a dozen hate groups. Then another body is discovered and a large supply of fertilizer goes missing, evoking memories of the Oklahoma City bombing. But it’s when he learns that his neighbor is a classic Lone Wolf—FBI parlance for a solo fanatic hell-bent on using high body counts to make political statements—that Zack realizes the idyllic town of his childhood is under siege. The fuse is lit to a catastrophe of unimaginable terror. And with time running out, Zack must face off with a madman.
Linwood Barclay is the #1 internationally bestselling author of seventeen novels for adults, including No Time for Goodbye, Trust Your Eyes and, most recently, A Noise Downstairs. He has also written two novels for children and screenplays. Three of those seventeen novels comprise the epic Promise Falls trilogy: Broken Promise, Far From True, and The Twenty-Three. His two novels for children – Chase and Escape – star a computer-enhanced dog named Chipper who’s on the run from the evil organization that turned him into a super-pup. Barclay’s 2011 thriller, The Accident, has been turned into the six-part television series L’Accident in France, and he adapted his novel Never Saw it Coming for the movie, directed by Gail Harvey and starring Eric Roberts and Emily Hampshire. Several of his other books either have been, or still are, in development for TV and film. After spending his formative years helping run a cottage resort and trailer park after his father died when he was 16, Barclay got his first newspaper job at the Peterborough Examiner, a small Ontario daily. In 1981, he joined the Toronto Star, Canada’s largest circulation newspaper. He held such positions as assistant city editor, chief copy editor, news editor, and Life section editor, before becoming the paper’s humour columnist in 1993. He was one of the paper’s most popular columnists before retiring from the position in 2008 to work exclusively on books. In 2004, he launched his mystery series about an anxiety-ridden, know-it-all, pain-in-the-butt father by the name of Zack Walker. Bad Move, the first book, was followed by three more Zack Walker thrillers: Bad Guys, Lone Wolf, and Stone Rain. (The last two were published in the UK under the titles Bad Luck and Bad News.) His first standalone thriller, No Time for Goodbye, was published in 2007 to critical acclaim and great international success. The following year, it was a Richard and Judy Summer Read selection in the UK, and did seven straight weeks at #1 on the UK bestseller list, and finished 2008 as the top selling novel of the year there. The book has since been sold around the world and been translated into nearly thirty languages. Barclay was born in the United States but moved to Canada just before turning four years old when his father, a commercial artist whose illustrations of cars appeared in Life, Look and Saturday Evening Post (before photography took over), accepted a position with an advertising agency north of the border. Barclay, who graduated with an English literature degree from Trent University, in Peterborough, Ontario, was fortunate to have some very fine mentors; in particular, the celebrated Canadian author Margaret Laurence, whom Linwood first met when she served as writer-in-residence at Trent, and Kenneth Millar, who, under the name Ross Macdonald, wrote the acclaimed series of mystery novels featuring detective Lew Archer. It was at Trent that he met Neetha, the woman who would become his wife. They have two grown children, Spencer and Paige.
Meh, not really up to the expectations set by the books I'd previously read by Mr. Barclay. Sure, there were some funny scenes, snarky remarks and the like here and there, but on the whole, the need to throw disbelief out the window just proved too much for this reader.
Nonsense and silliness aside, there just wasn't enough substance to elevate this beyond 3 stars, despite the zany antics and clever lines interspersed within the story. There were threads that could have been more compelling had they been fleshed out further, but so much time was spent on the main plot, which was just beyond the pale, that the opportunity faded.
Fans of Barclay will want to include this, but I'd recommend anyone new to the author begin elsewhere in his body of work.
I found myself laughing out loud several times while reading this book. I really liked being able to read suspense and laugh so much. It was good that the suspense was not really scary. Then I could easily sleep after reading. My husband read it too and I cannot remember him reading a book so quickly. He liked it very much.
By this point in my reading of the Zack Walker mysteries, anyone following my reviews will release I’m somewhat addicted. In fact, reading this series is reminding me just how much I love crime thrillers. I used to read them all the time, but as of late my reading of such books has been rather sporadic. However, this series is making me want to go back to the way I once was. I think, in part, I had a bad run with thriller books and that is why I moved away for a while – but I assure you, that is about to change.
With Bad Luck (or Lone Wolf, as it was published in some countries), Linwood Barclay brings us more of what we have come to enjoy so much with this series. Like the two prior books, Bad Move and Bad Guys, Bad Luck sucked me in from the very start, and refused to let up until I was finished with the book. The moment I was finished, I had one thought in my mind – to grab Bad News (or Stone Rain, as it was published in some countries), the final book, and see how everything came together.
Each time I finish a Zack Walker book, I want to dive into the next. Yet my desire was even stronger this time, as we get quite a bit of promise throughout this one of what is to come in the final book. We get to see that it will involve a side character I have rather enjoyed, one I want to see more of, and I cannot wait to see how her story unfolds. Whilst I have enjoyed all the Zack Walker mysteries, I have the highest hopes for the final book – it really is a whole new level of excitement.
Back to Bad Luck, though.
Bad Luck was another addictive read, leaving me turning the pages as I worked to see how everything came together. You’re sucked in deep, and before you know it coming up for air is no longer important. We get more of the great characters we have been enjoying throughout the prior books, along with being introduced to some new individuals, and we finally get to meet characters who have been mentioned in the past. We have a wonderful storyline, one with many elements that link together wonderfully – and even the predictable elements made for great enjoyment. We have more of the humour that keeps you chuckling away – some being quite childish, but all bringing a smile to your face.
Keeping me gripped throughout, and providing a serious kick, Bad Luck was another great Zack Walker mystery.
[rating tbd] Fun thriller with good comedy, readable writing, and tension levels that made the whole thing super addictive. Zack, as always, was brilliant fun, but while his dad was a good addition i did miss Sarah and the rest of his family in this instalment. The main villains were a little over the top with the juxtaposition between their scheme and beliefs and their occasionally childish behaviour, and very obvious almost from the get go, but the side plots concerning Zack’s family and Leonard added a much needed mystery element.
I love cracking a Linwood Barclay novel. I've read most of them but somehow missed this early one. He has such a talent for dropping the extraordinary into the ordinary, painting both with depth and style This one lives up to my expectations with relatable varied characters, a gripping plot that keeps you guessing and its fair share of excitement. There is no second guessing some of the twists and turns - s common Barclay hallmark. He is one of my favorite authors. A great read if entertainment is your goal.
Okay, this was another hilarious mystery. I absolutely love Zack Walker and the way that he see's the world. First, he is led to believe that his father has been killed by a bear. Turns out he wasn't and its some other poor guy. From there, the mystery takes off, long-held secrets are revealed, and what actually happened is completely unexpected. I love the characters that appear throughout the novel and the way that they work together. I both look forward to and am a little sad about reading the next and final book of the series. Who knows, he might write another one day.
Another superb read in the Zack Walker mystery series. Once an asshole, always an asshole! However, he now meets up with his father's neighbors who reign supreme over being assholes. Although I do find Zack to be much more subdued in this one.
I always like Linwood Barclay's books, and since I've read the most recent ones, I'm reading some I must have missed. This mystery's set in northern Ontario, well know to Barclay who grew up there. Fast action, unpredictable, and a smart ass main character - what more could you want?
Not anywhere near as good as his previous work. If this were my first experience with Barclay I wouldn't have read as many of his books. Really surprised!
I’m usually reading two or three books at the same time, and when I want to switch from the main read (in this case, Iron Flame), I’ll pick up Barclay, Harlan Coben, or one of many other thriller writers of that ilk. The protagonist of this story - it’s one of several books featuring the same guy - gets himself in more hot water than any one individual really should, but Barclay has a nice touch for first-person writing, and his books are fun to read.
Lone Wolf is the third book in Linwood Barclay's Zack Walker series. Although this book wasn't as good as the first two (I felt it was a little predictable), it was a great read. I love the Zack Walker character - a normal guy - a father, a dad, a writer, and he's funny in a sarcastic way. I enjoy a good mystery that adds some humor to the story and these book do that really well.
It had been a while since I read the first two books in this series, but I remembered that I liked them and returned to the books. I’m glad I did! While predictable, the story was funny in spots and suspenseful in others. The characters kept me entertained.
The original name of this book was “Bad Luck” to fit with the first two in the series - not sure why they changed it to “Lone Wolf”. Anyway it was a very enjoyable read and different than the first two. It took place at Zach’s father’s fishing camp and had a whole crew of weird and crazy characters. At times it was laugh-out-loud funny. There were the usual twists and turns and many tense situations. A really good read!
I've read and reviewed Linwood Barclay's BAD GUYS and BAD MOVE, and so I was disappointed when I started reading LONE WOLF.
I was expecting the same degree of humor and page-turning suspense that I'd come to expect after reading his previous books. It was definitely Linwood Barclay. Same prose, same approach to story writing, but so, so boring. I usually read books in a matter of days. A week tops. I bought LONE WOLF on September 8th, 2012. I kid you not. I gave up on it and tried again twice last year. Finally, a week ago, having finished the new Harlan Coben, Nelson Demille, and Jonathan Kellerman books, I finally decided to give LONE WOLF a final try.
About halfway through the book, things started getting interesting, a lot funnier, and a lot more like his other books.
But no reader should have to endure such boredom through chapter after chapter to get to the good stuff. Sorry.
There are two instances of what anyone familiar with firearms would consider glaring mistakes that caught my attention. One, a gun doesn't go off when it's dropped. Two, shotguns fire shot and in some instances slugs, not bullets. But then I realized that since the story is told from the first-person perspective of Zack Walker, a guy who admits in the narrative that he knows nothing about guns, the misconceptions about firearms actually make perfect sense.
Anyway, by the end of the book, Linwood Barclay manages to redeem himself. Barely.
I just visited his website and noticed Stephen King has endorsed Mr. Barclay's most recent novel, TRUST YOUR EYES.
I'm going to get it. I just have to know what Linwood Barclay did with his writing to deserve such high praise from the one-and-only Stephen King.
If it hadn't been for that endorsement, however, I think I might have dropped out of the Linwood Barclay fan club.
If you like Linwood Barclay, have nothing better to read, and are willing to suffer through a snail-paced beginning, then buy LONE WOLF. Otherwise, I'd give this one a miss.
'The sh*t you get into. I do declare.' So says Lawrence Jones to his friend Zack Walker near the end of Lone Wolf, the third in Linwood Barclay's series featuring anti-hero Zack Walker, sci-fi novelist and self professed paranoid geek turned newspaper reporter. And it's true. He's like Jessica Fletcher in Murder She Wrote - trouble just seems to follow him wherever he goes. This time around Zack visits his father after a false alarm call saying his father may have been gruesomely killed by a bear. This story is more of an action thriller with some mystery twists thrown in for good measure. Most other Barclay books that I've read are the opposite - mystery thrillers with some action added to ratchet up the suspense. I found myself comparing it to Lee Child's Jack Reacher novels, only Zack Walker doesn't have the self assured swagger of Reacher. I quite liked this story, Lone Wolf, and found it, like all Barclay's others, very hard to put down. Another one to recommend to lovers of good, fun stories.
4.75. It was a little slow at first, but about half way through I couldn't put it down, especially the last 100 pages. And then you keep wondering what story he wrote at the end for the newspaper and whether they caught the fish. And then out of the blue Trixie says something at the end that made me go back to the first chapter and I still couldn't figure it out, so just saying Barclays is an amazing writer!
The 3rd book in the Zack Walker series by one of my favourite authors Linwood Barclay. Another adventure in Zack's trouble filled life, full of action, thrills and a good dose of humour. Not Linwood Barclay's best work but they are certainly entertaining a well worth a read. The book finishes by setting up the the 4th and final episode of the Zack Walker series.
I've probably read a good two thirds of Barclay's books and this, for me, fits somewhere in the middle. The story itself is good (not great) and runs along at a steady enough pace, but it lacks the punch that made No Time For Goodbye so gripping - it'll take something pretty epic from him to top that, in my opinion.
titular sentence: p224: "A lone wolf," he whispered.
woah! p225: Pump action shotguns. With double barrels.
p263: "WHERE ARE MY DAUGHTER AND GRANDSON?" Timmy asked, the shotgun still raised and staring me in the face. p263: The bullet went past my left ear and blew a hole in the wall.
It sure is looking to be a pattern. But it is good, nonetheless.
Reluctant hero, Zack Walker, is called to go to his Father's cabin because his Father is missing and a body which has been mutilated by a bear has been discovered close by. As usual Zack's paranoia is dead on. A brilliant plot line... funny and suspenseful. A great book in a fantastic series.
I don't even know where to begin...I LOVE IT! First time reading a Barclay's book and I'm obsessed. It has it all: great characters, great storyline and great humor (a surprise on a thriller book). I cannot wait to read others Barclay's books.
I don't know how many Linwood Barclay novels I've read this summer, but expect the number is higher than the number of books most people read in a year. This summer literature has felt too heavy. After Stephen King recommended Barclay's upcoming book I went to the library website & started working my way through his books. It doesn't make sense to review them individually really, they are all good reads, but I thought I would on this one as a way of raising the author's profile among my friends.
Barclay has an entire series set in Promise Falls and that's where I started. I was super-engaged and pleased the way the books fit together, how a minor character in one book can show up as a major or minor character in another.
After I'd read all those and some stand alone novels I went back to his beginning, the Zack Walker books. I really like Zack and his family. The first book is clearly a first book and a bit over the top. But I can handle unbelievable plot lines if there are believable characters and relationships. One of the things I would praise Barclay for is handling of the way family relationships enter into our daily lives, but the upsides and the downsides. Particularly grateful at the moment to watch how Zack and his wife deal with their teenagers.
All of Barclay's books have humor in them, not over-the-top crazy humor, just humor as you encounter it in real life (a wry observation, an amusing comment you make to your spouse, a moment of ridiculousness), and that is also delightful. I found Zack's self-depreciating humor about his own anxieties to be charming. I'm savoring the fourth Zack Walker book now, and will be sad to see it end. Look forward to reading Barclay for a long time to come.
Zack Walk is really just a mild-mannered reporter - with nary a trace of Clark Kent and his alter-ego Superman - in sight. And, yet, his quest to live a quiet safe life just keeps going off track.
In this outing Zack receives a call about a mutilated corpse found at his father's fishing camp. Zack races up there heart in his throat, worried about his father. Fortunately it turns out the dead man is not his father. Also fortunately, during the course of this story Zack and his father get much closer.
Unfortunately, Zack gets involved in solving the mystery of first the dead mutilated man, than a dead guest of his father's and a possible terrorist bombing. With his usual humor and unlikely scenarios we follow Zack on another bumbling quest to get to the truth. How he manages to get out alive is astonishing, but he does.
He promises his wife this won't happen again, but even before the next installment of this series, we know this is not going to be the case!
“Zack Walker has stumbled onto some dicey stories before, but nothing like what he’s about to uncover when a mutilated corpse is found at his father’s lakeside fishing camp. As always, Zack fears the worst. And this time, his paranoid worldview is dead-on.
While the locals attribute the death to a bear attack, Zack suspects something far more ominous—a predator whose weapons include arson, assault, and enough wacko beliefs to fuel a dozen hate groups. Then another body is discovered and a large supply of fertilizer goes missing, evoking memories of the Oklahoma City bombing. But it’s when he learns that his neighbor is a classic Lone Wolf—FBI parlance for a solo fanatic hell-bent on using high body counts to make political statements—that Zack realizes the idyllic town of his childhood is under siege. The fuse is lit to a catastrophe of unimaginable terror. And with time running out, Zack must face off with a madman.”
I read the first two books in this series quite a while ago. I gave them to my Dad and he must have loved them as much as I did. When I saw him last he gave me the last two books in the series. I wish I hadn't waited so long to check back in with Zack Walker.
This was not my favorite in the series. It was a little predictable and somewhat less suspenseful, at least in the first half of the book. That doesn't mean it wasn't an amazing book though. Linwood Barclay can write a story. He can write a nearly hilarious mystery that you may consider taking time off work to read.
If you haven't read Barclay, you should. If you haven't read the Zack Walker series, start there. From speeding lawn-mowers and fish-guts, to gay pride and surveillance equipment, this book is worth reading up to and through! I am starting on his next one today!
Zack Walker is just sitting down to lunch with an old friend when he gets a call saying his father has been eaten by a bear.
But when he visits one of his father's neighbors and sees a framed photograph of Timothy McVeigh above the mantel, Zack's suspicious nature kicks in and he begins to think something is very wrong at his father's retirement fishing camp.
Then he meets his father's surprise girl friend and remembers she used to be their neighbor when he was a young boy and his mental wheels start turning.
As usual, he calls his friend Lawrence Jones in for an assist in figuring things out. And, as usual, Zack's wife is warning him this had better be the last time he gets involved in something like this.
It's another great read. I only wish the series were longer than four entries.
Predictable, but still entertaining. Also, it was nice to meet Zack’s dad, who is just as much a colourful asshole as he is!
The only reason I have given LONE WOLF three stars - which makes it my least favourite Barclay novel - is because of, as mentioned, how predictable it was. There were quite a few major “twists” that I managed to guess early in the book, such as the identity of Orville Thorne and the second killer (which Barclay always seems to have one of - seriously, though, he always has a major antagonist/s and then a secondary bad guy who is responsible for something that happened).
Despite this, though, I cannot call LONE WOLF a bad book. Why can’t I? Because it isn’t: even though the book failed to keep me guessing, it did succeed in keeping me entertaining, and it actually made me laugh on occasion. I can’t help but like Zack Walker, even if you’re meant to hate him - he’s unlikable in a likeable way - and it was fun to meet his father.