Series: Book 8 in the Jack Reacher series
Rating: ***
Tags: EN-Action, Lang:en
Summary
The latest entry in what is arguably today's finest
thriller series (_Persuader_, etc.) flashes back to series
hero Jack Reacher's days in the military police. It's New
Year's Eve 1990, the Soviet Union is about to collapse and
the military is on tenterhooks, wondering how a changed globe
will affect budgets and unit strengths, when the body of a
two-star general is found in a motel near Fort Bird, N.C.
Investigating is Reacher, 29, an MP major who's just been
transferred from Panamaâ€"one of dozens of top MPs
swapped into new posts on the same day, he later learns.
Missing from the general's effects is a briefcase that, it's
also revealed later, contained an agenda for a secret meeting
of army honchos connected to an armored division. Then the
general's wife is found bludgeoned to death at home and, soon
after, a third body surfaces, of a slain gay Delta Force
soldier whose murder contains clues pointing to Reacher as
culprit. With Summer, a young black female lieutenant MP at
his side (and, eventually, in his bed), Reacher digs deep, in
his usual brilliant and violent way, butting against
villainous superior officers, part of a grand conspiracy, as
well as against members of Delta Force who think that Reacher
killed their colleague. Unlike recent Reacher tales, the
novel is as much mystery as thriller, as Reacher and Summer
sift for and put together clues, but the tension is nonstop.
There's a strong personal element as well, involving
Reacher's relationship with his brother and dying mother,
which will make the novel of particular interest to
longstanding fans of the series. Textured, swift and told in
Reacher's inimitably tough voice, this title will hit lists
and will convince those who still need convincing that Child
has few peers in thrillerdom.
Child continues to knock out his action sequences with
flair, but in
The Enemy, he takes time to depict the piecemeal
construction of a criminal investigation. He also spends
energy on the hero’s relationship with his mother and
brother, an effort that further fills in Reacher’s
background and will surely please long-time fans of the
character. It’s true, Child throws in some clichéd
elements to this otherwise first-rate story. But most
reviewers easily looked past that flaw. “After reading
these books for so many years, I’m not easily kept in
the dark,” claims the
St. Petersburg Times, “so it’s always
fun when I’m still guessing toward the end.”
Copyright © 2004 Phillips & Nelson Media,
Inc.
From Publishers Weekly
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