"Joe Holley makes his fiction debut with the oddly titled The Purse Bearer, a novel 'of love and lust' that dunks us in the cesspool of '80s politics. The Houston Chronicle columnist pits a liberal-leaning lefty woman, possibly the first senator of that persuasion from the state, against a red-meat Republican in a head-spinning tale reminiscent of Brammer and Shrake." --Steve Bennett, San Antonio Express-News
"Texas journalist and novelist Joe Holley tracks the ordeals of Wily T. Foxx, a state employee turned campaign staffer for Rose 'Red' Ryder, whose run for the U.S. Senate bears a likeness to that of a certain legendary female Texas governor -- ahem, Ann Richards. Or Wendy Davis? The Purse Bearer: A Novel of Love, Lust, and Texas Politics, which many will regard as a roman Ă clef -- portrays Red as a no-nonsense, former state comptroller ready to take on the good ol' boy network." --Patricia Portales, therivardreport.com
"It's about one Wily T. Foxx, a sharp-eyed campaign worker who lands a job as bodyguard for Senate candidate Rose Marie Ryder in the 1980s. Ryder, a savvy, sharp-tongued politician seeking to become the state's first female U.S. Senator, takes on the good-ol'-boy network backing her opponent, rancher and banker Jimmy Dale Sisco. As Ryder's bodyguard and assistant -- the "purse bearer" of the title -- Foxx finds himself in the swirl of outsized characters and chicanery that characterizes Lone Star politics, even as a University of Texas student threatens his longtime relationship with girlfriend Jo Lynne James." --Carl Hoover, Waco Tribune
"Inevitable but unconvincing disclaimers aside, the novel abounds with references to the culture of Central Texas, and part of the fun is indulging the temptation to play pin-the-tail on the real people and locales of Texas' political milieu . . . . Festooned with insider references, Holley's novel should be a certified hoot." --Martin Barkley, Texas Observer