Series: Book 9 in the Jack Reacher series
Rating: ***
Tags: EN-Action, Lang:en
Summary
The final sentence of Child's ninth suspenser (after
The Enemy)—"Then he could buy a pair of shoes
and be just about anywhere before the sun went down"—is
quintessential Jack Reacher, the rugged ex-army cop who
practically defines the word "loner" and kicks ass with the
best of 'em. In the book's gripping opening, five people are
killed when a shooter opens fire in a small unnamed Indiana
city. But when ex-infantry specialist James Barr is
apprehended, he refuses to talk, saying only, "Get Jack
Reacher for me." But Reacher's already en route; having seen
a news story on the shooting, he heads to the scene with
disturbing news of his own: "[Barr's] done this before. And
once was enough." Nothing is what it seems in the riveting
puzzle, as vivid set pieces and rapid-fire dialogue culminate
in a slam-bang showdown in the villains' lair. (And what
villains: a quintet of Russian émigrés, the stuff
of everybody's worst nightmares, led by a wily 80-year-old
who makes Freddy Krueger look like Little Lord Fauntleroy.)
As usual, Child makes the most of Reacher's dry wit,
cut-to-the-chase psychology and stubborn taciturnity—in
short, this is a vintage double play for author and leading
man.
Child's new novel begins when a sniper methodically kills
five office workers with six quick shots and then disappears.
But in a Child thriller the expectations aroused by one page
are sure to be dashed on the next; unravelling and
re-tangling violent narratives is the writer's specialty.
This is the ninth of his books to feature the
drifter-investigator Jack Reacher—a hybrid of John D.
MacDonald's Travis McGee and Mickey Spillane's Mike
Hammer—and it certainly ranks in the first tier of the
series. There is considerable mayhem, lovingly described ("A
long time ago the bones in his spine had been methodically
cracked with an engineer's ball-peen hammer"), and there's a
good cast, including suspicious law-enforcement personnel and
an elderly Russian who is missing most of his fingers. Before
it's all, vividly, over, one feels confident that
Reacher—smart, rootless, and brave—will not only
get his man but make him suffer.
From Publishers Weekly
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