‘The best discovery I’ve come across in a long time’ Michael Connelly
When the beautiful woman you’ve longed for since boyhood calls and asks you to find her missing sister, what do you do? If you are Isaiah Quintabe – IQ to his friends – you’ll do everything you can. The girl, an erratic DJ and gambling addict, has gone missing in Las Vegas – with a frightening loan shark, Chinese Triad gangsters, and her own deadbeat boyfriend hot on her tail. But IQ’s search takes an unexpected turn when he meets a criminal mastermind who knows something about the murky circumstances surrounding his own brother’s death . . .
‘Witty and confident, with a bustling plot, this is a worthy follow-up to Ide’s excellent debut’ Guardian
When the beautiful woman you’ve longed for since boyhood calls and asks you to find her missing sister, what do you do? If you are Isaiah Quintabe – IQ to his friends – you’ll do everything you can. The girl, an erratic DJ and gambling addict, has gone missing in Las Vegas – with a frightening loan shark, Chinese Triad gangsters, and her own deadbeat boyfriend hot on her tail. But IQ’s search takes an unexpected turn when he meets a criminal mastermind who knows something about the murky circumstances surrounding his own brother’s death . . .
‘Witty and confident, with a bustling plot, this is a worthy follow-up to Ide’s excellent debut’ Guardian
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Reviews
Ide's superb ear for dialogue and sharp observational eye make this hum with life
Witty and confident, with a bustling plot, this is a worthy follow-up to Ide's excellent debut
Having read all three of Joe Ide's novels about the young Sherlock Holmes of the 'hood, Isaiah Quintabe, I am pleased to say that his third novel, Wrecked, is the best one yet. The stakes are higher, the suspense more intense, and the addition of a budding romance provides more character depth. Read it, enjoy it, and then impatiently wait around for the next one like the rest of us
Ide writes with confidence and a sharp wit
Joe Ide [is] the best thing to happen to mystery writing in a very long time
The game's afoot once again for 20-something genius sleuth Isaiah Quintabe, who has two cases to deal with: one leading him to mayhem in Las Vegas, the other to the man responsible for his brother's death. Things are pretty much as we left them with Isaiah in Ide's acclaimed debut mystery/thriller, IQ. He's still leading a mostly solitary life in his East Long Beach, California, neighborhood, using his agile intellect to help old ladies find lost jewelry, chase away abusive ex-husbands, or deal with volatile gang members who think he's too smart for his own good. The one case he'd most like to crack involves the hit-and-run death of his beloved older brother, Marcus. Just as he's finally figured out that Marcus' death was no accident, IQ gets a call from drop-dead-gorgeous Sarita Van, his late brother's one-time fiancee, who's now a high-powered attorney. She wants him to find her younger sister, Janine, a Vegas-based club DJ who shares a gambling addiction with her ne'er-do-well boyfriend, Benny. They're on the run from Leo, a vicious loan shark, whose collector in chief is a 7-foot-tall, broad-shouldered, dead-eyed Canadian named Balthazar. Isaiah's only backup on this mission is his short-fused but dauntless neighborhood buddy, Dodson, whose own plate is full trying to make his food truck profitable and waiting for his wife to give birth to their first child. Once on the Vegas strip, this post-millennial Holmes and Watson get far more than they bargained for as they have to fight and think their way through waves of Chinese mob muscle led by a baleful sex trafficker leaning heavily on Sarita and Janine's craven, corrupt father. Ide weaves the often antic events of this case in tandem with Isaiah's lonesome inquiry into his brother's death; a pursuit that leads him to the sinister Seb Habimana, an East African refugee who's made his mark in Isaiah's hood in shady real estate dealings and shadier money laundering operations. . . [Ide] keeps your head in the game throughout with his witty style and edgy storytelling, both of which show greater assurance than in his first novel-and even bigger potential for the future. A thrilling follow-up to one of the more auspicious detective-series debuts in recent memory.
he is the first new crime writer I have read in ages who truly feels like an heir to Elmore Leonard
Ide manages to combine light and dark in wholly unpredictable ways, blending comic capering with real-life bloodletting in a manner that diminishes neither and taps a vein of deep emotion lurking amid the laugh lines and spurts of violence. Anyone who loves Thomas Perry or Timothy Hallinan needs to hop on Ide's bandwagon while there's still room to sit