The Wolfman’s Fight Lives On: New Memoir Honors Black Entrepreneur Who Helped Shape Houston’s Nightlife Culture

Francis Page Jr. | 6/21/2026, 10:49 p.m.
Sandra Williams Pierce’s new memoir, The Wolfman: And the Fight Goes With It, preserves the inspiring legacy of her father, …
The Wolfman And the Fight Goes With It Book Cover

In Houston, every great neighborhood has its stories—the corner businesses that became community anchors, the music that spilled into the street, the families who built something out of grit, grace, and a whole lot of “keep going.” Frank “Wolfman” Williams was one of those stories.


Now, his daughter, Sandra Williams Pierce, is making sure his name, his work, and his unforgettable motto are preserved for generations through her new memoir, The Wolfman: And the Fight Goes With It.


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Known throughout Baytown and Houston’s historic Third Ward as “The Wolfman,” Williams was more than a nickname with swagger. He was a Black entrepreneur who understood that business could be both a livelihood and a lifeline. Over more than three decades, he operated six nightclubs, created opportunities for others, and helped shape a nightlife culture where celebration, connection, and community met under the same roof.


At a time when Black business owners often faced limited access, limited capital, and unlimited obstacles, Williams did what generations of Houston trailblazers have done best: he built anyway. His clubs became more than places to dance. They became gathering spaces where birthdays were toasted, love stories began, friendships deepened, and working people could exhale after long weeks of doing what life required.


In The Wolfman: And the Fight Goes With It, Pierce chronicles her father’s remarkable journey from humble beginnings to respected businessman, father, mentor, and community figure. The memoir also tenderly explores his later battle with dementia, offering readers not only a portrait of perseverance, but a daughter’s loving effort to preserve the voice, wisdom, and identity of a man whose legacy could not be allowed to fade.


“This book was never just about my father,” Pierce said. “It was about preserving a family legacy, documenting a piece of our community’s history, and ensuring that future generations know where they come from. If we don’t tell our stories, someone else will tell them for us—or they may be forgotten altogether.”


That message lands with special power in Houston, a city whose Black history is often carried in family photo albums, church programs, nightclub flyers, front-porch conversations, and the memories of elders who lived the chapters that textbooks too often skip. Pierce’s memoir stands in that sacred tradition of remembrance.


Williams’ personal motto, “And the fight goes with it,” became more than a phrase. It became a family compass. It speaks to endurance, responsibility, and the kind of determination that does not make a big speech before getting back up. It simply gets back up.


Pierce, a workforce development leader, entrepreneur, and advocate, said the urgency of the project deepened during her father’s experience with dementia.


“During my father’s experience with dementia, I realized how easily stories can become fragmented and memories can fade,” Pierce said. “I felt a responsibility to preserve his voice, his lessons, and the truth of who he was—not only for our family, but for the community that knew and loved him.”


That responsibility has now grown beyond the pages of one book. The memoir also marks the launch of And The Fight Goes With It, a community platform dedicated to preserving stories of resilience, caregiving, family legacy, entrepreneurship, and perseverance. Through the platform, readers are invited to share their own stories and honor the people who shaped their lives.


And in a beautiful full-circle moment, Pierce is preparing to welcome her father’s first great-granddaughter later this year. For her, the memoir has become more than a publication. It is an inheritance.


In The Wolfman: And the Fight Goes With It, readers will find more than the story of a nightclub owner. They will find the heartbeat of Black entrepreneurship, the tenderness of caregiving, and the reminder that legacy is not simply what we leave behind—it is what we choose to tell, protect, and pass forward.


Frank “Wolfman” Williams fought the good fight in business, family, and life. Thanks to Sandra Williams Pierce, the fight—and the story—goes on.


About the Book
The Wolfman: And the Fight Goes With It chronicles the life, legacy, and entrepreneurial journey of Frank “Wolfman” Williams, a respected businessman, nightclub owner, father, and community leader who operated six nightclubs in Baytown and Houston’s historic Third Ward over a thirty-year span. The book is available through Amazon in paperback and hardcover formats.


Readers are invited to continue the conversation at www.AndTheFightGoesWithIt.com, where they

can share stories of resilience, family legacy, caregiving, entrepreneurship, and triumph.