Rating: Summary: READ TO THE NTH DEGREE Review: The voice of former military man Jack Reacher is stentorian, commanding. Leave it to first-rate performer Dick Hill to fully embody whatever character he's reading, and he does Reacher to the nth degree.
As one might expect with such a voice, Reacher is a fully-in-charge kind of guy. That is until the day he's kidnaped along with a woman. That same Chicago day a dentist is abducted from his office parking lot and bunched into the trunk of his car.
Turns out that the woman grabbed along with Reacher is Holly Johnson, a special agent from the FBI's Chicago office. So, of course, the FBI is working overtime in an effort to find her. They've no clue that she's in the clutches of a psychotic neo-Nazi who gets his jollies from watching blood loss.
On the other hand, the psycho has no idea that he has Reacher, a super smart Silver Star hero and a sharpshooter, on his hands. Listen along as Holly and Reacher plot to outsmart their captors.
Rating: Summary: One man army Review: Die trying is my first experience of Lee Child and his protagonist Jack Reacher. But it definetely won't be the last. The novel starts with a line which goes like: "Joe Smith died because he felt brave." Then we have a tight scene describing the situation farther... That's the way to fire off a thriller!In this book Jack Reacher is a by-stander grabbed by the kidnappers of a young FBI agent. As the author tells all the critics of coincidenses being at the heart of the novel: @It was a freak chance." Truthuly, I don't like coincidences in books, too, but I can forgive them in a good one. This is one of those. Why did the bad guys kidnap a FBI agent? What is being built in a room in a remote Oklahoma location? And who is the man, who cruelly kills the workers, after they completed building? Mr. Child wrights with sureness of a seasoned author, and when he takes a rest from plot turns he gives you the action scenes most authors would die trying to reproduce. It is a rare author indeed, who can talk about velocities, weapon parts and all the technical data, and still keeping it exciting. There are minor points which cost the book one star in my opinion - the main being some things coming out of the blue in the last pages of the novel (these things concern Holly, and I won't say any more of them), but this is really a strong thriller, with a solid plot, hard-as-nails protagonist and the book equivalent of bullet-time scenes of Matrix.
Rating: Summary: Lee Child brings back Jack Reacher.... Review: for his second outing. Child's first novel about the anti-hero, Reacher, "The Killing Floor", was complex and compelling; and hard to put down. Some of his narrative was definitely the work of a "first-time" author. I looked forward to reading about Reacher in series, assuming the plots would stay action-packed, and the writing would improve. "Die Trying", the sequel, does not disappoint. It is a fast-paced read sketched out along the same lines as Child's first novel, but in a "Montana militia" setting. Child's writing style, unfortunately, has not improved. He mimics the contrivances of the first novel: coincidental involvement of Reacher in a major crime, the necessary female entanglement, the incredible string of violence that finally leads up to Reacher being able to exit to continue his poor man's tour around the country. That's OK, but there is also a ton of repetitive writing - from the detailed description of every weapon Reacher touches or sees in the book, to the numerous times his captors should have done him in, only to see him elude them, but ultimately lose his freedom (but not his life) instead. Child is also guilty of having his characters repeat phrases over and over, and this appears to be a problem of bad editing. Despite these broad areas of criticism, I gotta admit that its incredibly hard to put a Jack Reacher novel down. Reacher is resourceful and the author succeeds in capturing your attention with every twist of plot. So...on to Tripwire, the 3rd in the series!
Rating: Summary: Hard to put down Review: I have a recurrent grouse that not enough thrillers are good enough at keeping you gripped, so three cheers for this one which I couldn't put down. In fact, apart from Free by Paul Vincent I have had a lean year looking for well written page-turners and it's alreay November. Oh well, Lee Child and Paul Vincent seem to be hard working authors so we'll just need to keep buying their stuff I suppose.
Rating: Summary: Never met a Jack Reacher book I didn't like Review: In another rapidly paced action thriller, Lee Child hero, ex military policeman and superstar Jack Reacher, as he is inclined to do, unwittingly stumbles into a kidnapping. While ambling down a Chicago street he accidently collides into an attractive, limping and crutch toting woman knocking down her dry cleaning. While helping her pick up her fallen garments, Reacher and the woman are accosted by two gun wielding guys and forced into a waiting car. They are abducted and then transfered and locked into the cargo area of a truck where they are driven to an unknown destination. In short order Reacher learns that his kidnap companion is FBI agent Holly Johnson who is recuperating from torn knee ligaments and on light duty for the moment. She happens to be the daughter of Joint Chiefs of Staff leader General Johnson and also the god daughter of the president. After a long arduous journey, in which Reacher declines several escape attempts to protect the injured Johnson, they finally arrive at an enclosure deep in the forests of northwestern Montana. This geographically secure enclosure is the home of the Montana Militia, a para-military neo-Nazi group headed by a 400 pound behemoth Beau Borken. Borken, a paranoid and maniacal son of a California farmer who blew his head off when the government repossessed his farm, is a ruthless murderer who has no use for the U.S. government. He plans to use Holly Johnson's kidnapping to convert his militia into a separate nation! The FBI gets wind of the plot through a covert operative within Borken's group. Without presidential support they commence an operation to free Johnson. Reacher, of course, while being held prisoner also plots to accomplish the same thing. Childs' follow up to The Killing Floor, while falling a little short of the intrigue is still suspenseful and a worthwhile chapter in a continuing series.
Rating: Summary: The Master of Mayhem Review: Lee Child's "Jack Reacher" novels have a refreshing purity about them: simply action, mayhem, and brutality wrapped around straight, unadorned plots. Testosterone runs high, larger-than-life bad guys take evil to new depths, cliffhangers that would embarrass Indiana Jones. And if there is such a thing as a literary equivalent of film's slow-motion action scenes, then Lee Child is the master. Guns don't simply shoot a bullet; Child talks muzzle velocities, projectile weights, gun barrel chemistry, and the physics of 0.5-inch diameter bullet fired from a Barrett sniper rifle passing through skull and brain. All very violent, and all very entertaining. "Die Trying" is Lee Child's second Jack Reacher novel, and there is no sophomore jinx. Reacher, ex-military cop and veritable walking encyclopedia of all armament, happens on the wrong place at the wrong time in downtown Chicago, finding himself unwittingly in the middle of a kidnapping. The victim: Holly Johnson, a beautiful and brainy FBI agent, but, as it turns out, much, much more. The perps: a band of neo-fascist wacko's - think Waco or Ruby Ridge - about to hatch a plot to declare independence and secede from the United States. Meanwhile, everybody from the FBI to the US Marines tries to find and free Holly, while Reacher works on the inside - as a co-hostage - fights to protect Holly's honor, chastity, and life. Child paints a wonderfully diabolically twisted Beau Borkin as the leader of the cult, and a rather fascinating picture of life inside an extreme right-wing conspiracy. Bottom line: not a novel you'll be retelling to the grandkids, and no literary milestone, but few can verbalize raw power better than Lee Child. A great page-turner, a great diversion, pure entertainment.
Rating: Summary: The Master of Mayhem Review: Lee Child's "Jack Reacher" novels have a refreshing purity about them: simply action, mayhem, and brutality wrapped around straight, unadorned plots. Testosterone runs high, larger-than-life bad guys take evil to new depths, cliffhangers that would embarrass Indiana Jones. And if there is such a thing as a literary equivalent of film's slow-motion action scenes, then Lee Child is the master. Guns don't simply shoot a bullet; Child talks muzzle velocities, projectile weights, gun barrel chemistry, and the physics of 0.5-inch diameter bullet fired from a Barrett sniper rifle passing through skull and brain. All very violent, and all very entertaining. "Die Trying" is Lee Child's second Jack Reacher novel, and there is no sophomore jinx. Reacher, ex-military cop and veritable walking encyclopedia of all armament, happens on the wrong place at the wrong time in downtown Chicago, finding himself unwittingly in the middle of a kidnapping. The victim: Holly Johnson, a beautiful and brainy FBI agent, but, as it turns out, much, much more. The perps: a band of neo-fascist wacko's - think Waco or Ruby Ridge - about to hatch a plot to declare independence and secede from the United States. Meanwhile, everybody from the FBI to the US Marines tries to find and free Holly, while Reacher works on the inside - as a co-hostage - fights to protect Holly's honor, chastity, and life. Child paints a wonderfully diabolically twisted Beau Borkin as the leader of the cult, and a rather fascinating picture of life inside an extreme right-wing conspiracy. Bottom line: not a novel you'll be retelling to the grandkids, and no literary milestone, but few can verbalize raw power better than Lee Child. A great page-turner, a great diversion, pure entertainment.
Rating: Summary: Let the action begin Review: Lee Childs can write on violence like no other. Lee Childs can discribe a fired bullet with a mathematicians wisdom. Above all Lee Childs writes a story that will cause you to delay interest in anything until consuming it to the last page quickly as possible. I have now read three of his offerings and will continue. His action and near fact fiction fill me with wonder and a grand appreciation for a eloquent writer.
Rating: Summary: Action from the Start Review: The action literally starts on the first page of this book when the super-hero Jack Reacher is abducted with a woman who had just dropped her dry cleaning. The woman is an FBI agent and, of course, something more. Reacher and she are taken to the outpost of a militia intent on declaring its independence from the USA and doing other unmentionable (here) malicious things.
As usual, Reacher is up to the task - and more. Using his inhuman ability to analyze every problem and shoot every gun known he once again prevails. Like all the Reacher novels, this is action-packed with some good twists and turns in the plot. The super bad guy was a bit over the top, but part of enjoying these books is suspending belief for a time.
A good, fun action-packed read for a period of escapism. Great beach reading.
Rating: Summary: great--could not put it down Review: the title says it all. Anyone will like this book
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