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Written in Fire book cover
Written in Fire
A Lobo Black/Quinn Booker Mystery
1995
First Published
3.60
Average Rating
163
Number of Pages

Part of Series

Quinn Booker turned his back on his father's West Point background and his mother's society upbringing to become a writer. Louis Bowman (Lobo) Blacke is the lawman Booker made famous in a series of biographies, a marshal - a man of action - who was backshot and must now get around in a wheelchair. With his share of the earnings from the books, Lobo bought a Wyoming newspaper, The Witness, and has dedicated his time to catching the man who crippled him. Frustrated by his loss of mobility, he connived Booker into giving up his Eastern creature comforts to come to Wyoming Territory to be his legs. Booker is barely off the train before murder tracks him into Le Four and Lobo begins telling him what to do and exactly how to do it. It doesn't take very long for Booker to learn that writing about catching criminals is one thing, but doing it is quite another. Why, a man could get killed unless he learns certain basics, like what to do in a gunfight. This certainly wasn't what Quinn Booker was raised to do, but working with Lobo Blacke is definitely what he was born to do.

Avg Rating
3.60
Number of Ratings
15
5 STARS
13%
4 STARS
47%
3 STARS
27%
2 STARS
13%
1 STARS
0%
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Author

William L. DeAndrea
William L. DeAndrea
Author · 16 books
William L. DeAndrea (1952–1996) was born in Port Chester, New York. While working at the Murder Ink bookstore in New York City, he met mystery writer Jane Haddam, who became his wife. His first book, Killed in the Ratings (1978), won an Edgar Award in the best first mystery novel category. That debut launched a series centered on Matt Cobb, an executive problem-solver for a TV network who unravels murders alongside corporate foul play. DeAndrea’s other series included the Nero Wolfe–inspired Niccolo Benedetti novels, the Clifford Driscoll espionage series, and the Lobo Blacke/Quinn Booker Old West mysteries. A devoted student of the mystery genre, he also wrote a popular column for the Armchair Detective newsletter. One of his last works, the Edgar Award–winning Encyclopedia Mysteriosa (1994), is a thorough reference guide to sleuthing in books, film, radio, and TV.
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