In the sequel, Wales follows the tracks of a group of Mexican criminals into Mexico.
[2] In a review for Western American Literature, Delbert E. Wylder wrote that The Vengeance Trail of Josey Wales contains "enough scenes of torture and bloodshed to satisfy any reluctant sadist".
He wrote that he would not read the first novel because it "is enough to find out that even viciousness can be handled with sentimentality".
[2] The same year as The Vengeance Trail of Josey Wales was published, The New York Times published an article revealing that Forrest Carter was a persona of the segregationist activist Asa Carter.
A film adaptation of The Vengeance Trail of Josey Wales was released in 1986 as The Return of Josey Wales, directed by and starring Michael Parks.