Reacher is back - the taut new thriller from the Sunday Times and New York Times number one bestseller, winner of the Specsavers Crime & Thriller Book of the Year
Lee Child is one of the world's leading thriller writers. His
novels consistently achieve the number one slot in hardback and
paperback on bestsellers lists on both sides of the Atlantic, and
are translated into over forty languages. Born in Coventry, he now
lives in America.
Visit www.leechild.com
I love him. It's said that a Jack Reacher novel is bought every
four seconds somewhere in the world. He is to crime fiction what
Clint Eastwood's 'man with no name' was to the western. Lee Child's
genius in 17 novels has been to create a tough guy hero that men
will envy and women will adore.
*Daily Express*
Pure escapism...He has redefined the thriller for the 21st
century...Reacher is a knight errant every bit as much as Raymond
Chandler's Philip Marlowe was. ...stunningly good.
*Daily Mirror*
I am no longer (if I ever was) an unbiased critic. I am more of a
Lee Child fan. I am pro-Reacher, his massive but benevolent brute
of a drifter, vigilante hero....I'll definitely barrel through the
next one too.
*Independent*
Smart, breathless...more ingenious than other Reacher books have
been about the underground activities Reacher is thwarting.
*New York Times*
A fascinating, swaggeringly confident performance
*Sunday Times*
A page-turning caper filled with well-timed surprises...there is
also the saving grace of Reacher's deadpan humor -as when he is
sawing with a motel key at a captive's rope bindings. "Don't you
have a knife?" the man asks. "I have a toothbrush,! Reacher
responds. "That won't help," the captive says, to which Reacher
retorts: "It's good against plaque."
*Wall Street Journal*
With Child, you can always count on furious action - and a damned
good time.
*Miami Herald*
Masterful writing and storytelling...Child makes it look
effortless...If there were such a thing as a writer-magician, Lee
Child woud be the face above the cloak.
*Washington Post*
Child always puts his heart into the elaborate quasi-military
operations he cooks up for Reacher...But there's something even
more chilling about those lonesome hours spent riding the
Interstate, watching the rundown family farms and commercial strip
malls and topless bars go by.
*International Herald Tribune*
Will leave the legion of Reacher addicts satisfied but craving for
their next fix.
*Irish Independent*
In Child's latest Reacher novel, his ex-army hero is hitchhiking to Virginia, battered but unbowed, when he's picked up by a car carrying three men and a woman. Much of the book takes place in that car, with the always-suspicious Reacher doing a lot of sleuthing into the backgrounds of his mysterious fellow passengers. His suspicions are, of course, well founded. The four are connected to at least one murder. Before too long, Reacher has switched vehicles, now driving with a beautiful FBI agent and following his former companions into the heart of a seemingly inscrutable conspiracy. Some listeners may find the road trip a little meandering and the arbitrary death of a likeable character off-putting, but none should have any complaints about narrator Dick Hill's vigorous, sardonic performance in this audio edition. His reading is perfectly tuned to Child's hardboiled prose, and the narrator maintains an energy level that's high enough to carry the listener past some of the book's slower passages. Of special note is Hill's ability to pick just the right word to linger on, nicely capturing Reacher's attitude, be it one of distrust, sarcasm, anger, or, in rare instances, warmth. A Delacorte hardcover. (Sept.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
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