Series: Book 10 in the Jack Reacher series
Rating: Not rated
Tags: Fiction
Summary
*Starred Review* Child's last two Jack
Reacher novels (One Shot, 2005, and The Enemy, 2004) have
emphasized procedural detail rather than the high-octane action
that gave the series its identity. There's still plenty of
procedure, but this time the gearshift is back in overdrive:
"Reacher, alone in the dark. Armed and dangerous. Coming back."
Former military cop Reacher does his level best not to
come back: he lives off the grid (no address, no belongings),
but his instincts keep driving him toward solving other
people's problems, the kind that won't stay solved without
violence. Here, he's having an espresso in Greenwich Village
when a man walks across the street, gets in a car, and drives
away. It happens every day, but it's not always a kidnapper
picking up the ransom. Soon Reacher is involved in helping a
ruthless mercenary find his wife and stepdaughter before the
kidnappers tie up loose ends. There's a lot more to it than
that, though, and it takes three-fourths of the novel before
Reacher figures out who the bad guys are.
Like all the best thrillers, this one is about more than
pace: yes, the narrative propels you forward with a
locomotive's thrust, but Child never loses sight of the small
detail or the human fabric--not unlike Reacher in the dark,
armed and dangerous, intent on the action in front of him but
always aware of the sights and sounds to his sides and behind
him. Bill Ott Copyright © American Library Association.
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