Series: Book 5 in the Jack Reacher series
Rating: ***
Tags: EN-Action, Lang:en
Summary
Jack Reacher is Spenser before Robert Parker domesticated
his Boston PI--in fact, Reacher's even tougher than Hawk. He
can inhale and exhale a few times and pump up his muscles so
they make a bad character think twice about tangling with
him. And he's spent enough time on the right side of the law
to know how to operate in the gray zone if that's what it
takes to save the fair maiden, punish the bad guys, and right
any other wrongs he happens to encounter in the course of his
wanderings.
Echo Burning is vintage Lee Child, a smartly paced,
intricately plotted, and masterfully characterized thriller
starring Reacher, the ex-military cop who's so concerned
about commitment to anything--a woman, possessions, a
permanent address--that he only owns the clothes on his back.
But he's the kind of justice-seeking guy you'd want on your
side, especially if you were an abused wife trapped in a
marriage you can't get out of until, and unless, somebody
bumps off your old man. Reacher's sympathetic, but he's not crazy. Nonetheless, he
allows himself to be drawn into beautiful Carmen Greer's
orbit, which ought to teach a guy not to hitchhike. Agreeing
to protect her from the husband who's about to be released
from jail and, according to Carmen, who's about to pay her
back for tipping off the authorities to the tax fraud that
landed him in prison, Reacher moves into the bunkhouse of the
Echo, Texas, ranch that's owned by the bigoted, bitter, but
powerful Greer family, which despises Carmen because she's
Mexican and tolerates her only because she's Sloop Greer's
wife and the mother of his child. The expected bloodshed
ensues, but it's Sloop, not Carmen, who ends up with a bullet
in his head. Reacher's convinced that Carmen acted in
self-defense, even after other evidence comes to light that
suggests there's more--and less--to her unhappy tale than
even her own lawyer believes. This is the best Jack Reacher
yet, smart, stylish, and convincing. If it's your first
encounter with Child's work, be sure to check out his
backlist--
, , etc.
--Jane Adams
Jack Reacher, the vagabond freelance lawman who never
hesitates to stick his nose into private business, takes his
lively act to Texas, embroiling himself in what starts as a
messy domestic dispute before turning far more ominous. The
rugged former army cop comes to the aid of Carmen Greer, who
picks him up on the side of the road one morning outside
Lubbock, then asks him to kill her abusive husband. Sloop
Greer is getting out of prison in a few days, and Carmen
fears he will start beating her again. Reacher declines, but
agrees to protect Carmen, hiring on as a cowhand at the
couple's remote ranch in Echo County, Tex., far outside
Pecos. Within hours of Sloop's return from prison, where he
was serving time for tax evasion, violence strikes. But the
victim isn't Carmen; it's Sloop. He's found shot dead, and
Carmen is arrested. End of story? Hardly. Most wandering
heroes would move on at this point, but not Reacher. He
begins taking a hard look at both Carmen and Sloop's past, as
well as local history. What he finds ugly secrets, human
suffering, political evil is repulsive to a man who's been
around as many blocks as Reacher. Child (Running Blind;
Tripwire) has developed a fine franchise with Reacher, who
comes from the Robin Hood mold, but has enough personal
quirks and moments of unusual insight to separate him from
the pack. Set in a literally and figuratively smoldering
landscape, this is a clean, infectious story that taps deeply
into two troubling human emotions the psychology of abuse and
the desire for retribution. Author tour. (July)Forecast:
Reacher's fifth adventure a BOMC, Literary Guild, Mystery
Guild and Doubleday Book Club selection is among his
strongest, and should hook even those who haven't read the
other novels in the series. Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.Amazon.com Review
From Publishers Weekly