Alex Cross #9

The Big Bad Wolf

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Alex Cross battles the most ruthless and powerful killer he has ever encountered - a predator known only as "the Wolf. "Alex Cross's first case since joining the FBI has his new colleagues stymied. Across the country, men and women are being kidnapped in broad daylight and then disappearing completely. These people are not being taken for ransom, Alex realizes. They are being bought and sold. And it looks as if a shadowy figure called the Wolf - a master criminal who has brought a new reign of terror to organize crime - is behind this business in which ordinary men and women are sold as slaves. Even as he admires the FBI's vast resources, Alex grows impatient with the Bureau's clumsiness and caution when it is time to move. A lone wolf himself, he has to go out on his own in order to track the Wolf and try to rescue some of the victims while they are still alive. As the case boils over, Alex is in hot water at home too. His ex-fiancee, Christine Johnson, comes back into his life - and not for the reasons Alex might have hoped.

400 pages, Paperback

First published October 13,2003

This edition

Format
400 pages, Paperback
Published
January 1, 2004 by Grand Central Publishing
ISBN
9780446610223
ASIN
B0072Q2UU8
Language
English
Characters More characters
  • Alex Cross

    Alex Cross

    The main character, a homicide detective. Deputy Chief of Detectives and in his mid 30s in Along Came a Spider. Has a doctorate in psychology. Works and lives in the ghettos of Washington DC. Smart and observant, hard-working, and black. Has 2 children, D...

  • Kyle Craig

    Kyle Craig

    An FBI Special Agent. Becomes one of Alex Crosss go-to people at the FBI. He works at their facilities in Quantico, Virginia.more...

  • Jamilla
  • Christine Johnson
  • Elizabeth Connolly
  • Brendan Connolly

About the author

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Official US Site
Official UK Site
JIMMY Patterson Books
ReadKiddoRead

James Patterson is the most popular storyteller of our time. He is the creator of unforgettable characters and series, including Alex Cross, the Women's Murder Club, Jane Smith, and Maximum Ride, and of breathtaking true stories about the Kennedys, John Lennon, and Tiger Woods, as well as our military heroes, police officers, and ER nurses. Patterson has coauthored #1 bestselling novels with Bill Clinton and Dolly Parton, and collaborated most recently with Michael Crichton on the blockbuster Eruption. He has told the story of his own life in James Patterson by James Patterson and received an Edgar Award, ten Emmy Awards, the Literarian Award from the National Book Foundation, and the National Humanities Medal.

This author also writes under the following name: Džejms Paterson

Community Reviews

Rating(4 / 5.0, 98 votes)
5 stars
32(33%)
4 stars
38(39%)
3 stars
28(29%)
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98 reviews All reviews
April 17,2025
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This series would be better served with less family drama and more detecting. It would also be better if bad guys didn't walk away scot free. 4 of 10 stars
April 17,2025
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Was going to give this one 4 stars rounded up to 4.5. Until the ending.

When this book starts ramping down for conclusion it then decides to revs back up just to make you really engaged and understand that the lull was to number your sense of security into what is a crazy third act full of twists and turns. Not handled the best way, but it makes you wonder if any other way would actually be worse... hmmmm. On to the next one.
April 17,2025
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Thirty-seven-year-old Elizabeth Connolly is in the midst of a busy day. There are errands to run, an appointment to keep with a hairdresser, and one of her children’s birthday parties to plan and conduct. She’s pretty in that Claudia Schiffer way, and she looks closer to 30 than 37. Her world changes forever in the parking lot of an Atlanta mall where she is kidnapped by a man and woman with heavy Russian accents, and, with her children looking on, she is forced into her own car, which is driven off by the Russians.

Alex Cross is in his first few weeks as a trainee with the FBI as this ninth Alex Cross novel begins. He’s hoping that the change to FBI agent from DC cop will allow him more time with his kids and a greater opportunity to develop a relationship with his latest love interest. But Elizabeth’s kidnapping puts an end to all that for some time, and it will be up to Alex to solve the mystery of who the Wolf really is and why Elizabeth and a host of others have disappeared.

This is not a book free of profanity, and while rape is committed on Elizabeth and other characters, the actual scenes are not graphically described.

If battling the Russian mafia and some of the old guard at the FBI who resent his presence isn’t enough, poor Alex must face his ex-lover and the mother of his youngest child who drops in to demand full custody of the little boy.

I enjoyed this book; it finally pulled me out of the bad book slump I’ve been in most of the summer. The audio production is overdone as far as I’m concerned. Every one of the more than 100 chapters had to start with some kind of musical flourish, and that was a bit much for me. But the narration was good and the audio effects were, for the most part on track. Since I speed the book up significantly to read it, those sections where the producers felt the need to have crickets chirping in the background were pretty funny. The speeded up book sounded a lot like an old cassette player whose belt is on its last dry leg during those cricket scenes.

But the characterization is really quite good. Alex retains his humanity despite the horror of what he is seeing. This is a brutal book in spots wherein kidnappings and forcible sexual assaults are either described in the case of the kidnappings or at least mentioned in the case of the assaults. It isn’t just women who are being kidnapped by the Wolf’s emissaries. One of his paying customers likes young college boys, and he pays top dollar to have them purchased and brought to his remote location where he disposes of them after he’s had his emotional and sexual way with them.

There’s plenty of suspense to keep you reading, and I sure didn’t see the end coming, especially where poor Liz Connolly was concerned. Still, the writing style here is good. This appears to be vintage Patterson before he farmed his work out to other writers.
April 17,2025
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This was your typical Alex Cross book. The writing isn't great but there is a lot of action and the story is good enough to keep the reader interested. That being said if you've never read an Alex Cross book before I would not start with this one. There is little to no character development in this book and if you aren't already familiar with the characters you probably won't be interested in this story. It seems like Patterson spent more time reviving unresolved issues from previous books so that he could tie them into a new case than he did actually developing this story so that it can be enjoyed by both new and old readers.
April 17,2025
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3.5 stars

Back a few years ago the Alex Cross books were my favorite series and I listened to the first 8 books almost back to back. I don't remember why I paused the series back then and only now picked it up again but it took me only a few minutes to bond again with Alex and his family and I even remembered the minor characters which almost never happens to me since my brain is a mess :D

As usual the case started almost immediately and while Alex Cross now works for the FBI and has a new environment around him it still felt like good old times to be back in this series, even though I kinda missed his former partner and friend John Sampson who only made a short appearance this time.

The story dealt with kidnappings and human trafficking and had a good level of suspense but it didn't give me quite the thrill of some of the previous books. What bothered me most was that a lot of things happened way too fast and I sometimes had the impression that James Patterson didn't take enough time to thoroughly write some scenes (maybe because he is too busy publishing 8,323 novels per year^^). There were passages where Alex and his colleagues flew to a place, went on a mission and arrived back in what felt like 10 sentences and that made it sometimes a bit hard for me to feel as if I as a reader were a part of the investigation. Also it seemed to me as if Alex' and his team's progress was often based on luck and not on their skills which made the case appear a bit simple.

However I had a good time listening to the book and it seems as if Pattersons has found a new remarkable villain with the "Wolf" and I definitely want to catch up on all the other books in the Alex Cross series now!
April 17,2025
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really liked the first few Alex Cross books, until they degenerated into weak, implausible plots, written blatantly for the money, not for the readers.

I carried on for a while because i hoped they'd pick up again. I lost the will to give him the benefit of doubt any more when there was a two page product placement for Mercedes and he was chasing off to Africa, because of yet another woman he loved and ended in an eyeball showdown with a crocodile.


April 17,2025
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Another doozie from Patterson. This is Alex Cross' first case in the FBI and it doesn't disappoint. Cross has a few enemies already in the FBI, but that does not stop him from going head on with The Wolf. Women abducted and sold as sex slaves. A Russian mafia. The hunt. Cross' personal life takes a back seat to his. Re position. This one was a good ride.
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