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Persuader (Jack Reacher, No. 7) by Lee Child
Book Summary InformationAuthor: Lee Child Edition: Mass Market Paperback Audio: English (Unknown); English (Original Language); English (Published) Published: 2009-05-19 ISBN: 0440245982 Number of pages: 496 Publisher: Dell Product features: - ISBN13: 9780440245988
- Condition: New
- Notes: BRAND NEW FROM PUBLISHER! 100% Satisfaction Guarantee. Tracking provided on most orders. Buy with Confidence! Millions of books sold!
Book Reviews of Persuader (Jack Reacher, No. 7)Book Review: Another fun action tale! Summary: 5 Stars
"Persuader" is the third Jack Reacher novel I've read by Lee Child. After reading "One Shot" and "The Hard Way," I went backwards a bit and read this earlier book. I really liked the bad guys in this novel, especially the behemoth Paulie. You knew his demise would come, and I liked how Child did it. I also liked how Child wove the back story of events from ten years previous into the present day happenings of Jack Reacher.
I was a little surprised when I started reading the book that it was in first person, since the two others I read were not. I was also surprised to see Jack Reacher looking at his watch for the time. In "The Hard Way," he always knew what time it was with his internal clock that he really couldn't explain. The story being told in first person was still very well done and I enjoyed it. The bit about the watch was no big deal, just something I noticed and thought "hmmm" to myself.
Overall, I'm still very happy I discovered Lee Child and the Jack Reacher novels. I am enjoying them and find them to be brutal action tales with a great lead character and interesting bad guys and supporting characters. They are fun to read, keep you attention, and make you not want to put the book down because you yearn to find out what happens next. Great suspense, interesting characters, tough-guy hero, mean bad guys, and a very entertaining story make "Persuader" a fun action tale and an enjoyable read.
Reviewed by Alain Burrese, J.D., author of Hard-Won Wisdom From the School of Hard Knocks and the dvds: Hapkido Hoshinsul, Streetfighting Essentials, Hapkido Cane, the Lock On Joint Locking Essentials series and articles including a regular column on negotiation for The Montana Lawyer. Alain Also wrote a series of articles called Lessons From The Apprentice.
Summary of Persuader (Jack Reacher, No. 7)Jack Reacher.
The ultimate loner.
An elite ex-military cop who left the service years ago, he?s moved from place to place?without family?without possessions?without commitments.
And without fear. Which is good, because trouble?big, violent, complicated trouble?finds Reacher wherever he goes. And when trouble finds him, Reacher does not quit, not once?not ever.
But some unfinished business has now found Reacher. And Reacher is a man who hates unfinished business.
Ten years ago, a key investigation went sour and someone got away with murder. Now a chance encounter brings it all back. Now Reacher sees his one last shot. Some would call it vengeance. Some would call it redemption. Reacher would call it?justice. Jack Reacher, the taciturn ex-MP whose adventures in Lee Child's six previous solidly plotted, expertly paced thrillers have won a devoted fan base, returns in this explosive tale of an undercover operation set up by the FBI to rescue an agent investigating Zachary Beck, a reclusive tycoon believed to be a kingpin in the drug trade. The novel begins with a bang as Reacher rescues Beck's son from a staged kidnapping in order to get close to his father--and trace the connection between Beck and Quinn, a former army intelligence officer who tried to sell blueprints of a secret weapon to Iraq but was murdered before he could pull it off. Or so Reacher thinks, until he spots Quinn in the crowd at a concert in Boston. As usual, Child ratchets up the tension and keeps the reader in suspense until the last page, although his enigmatic hero hardly ever seems to break a sweat. In the tough guy tradition, Reacher and his creator are overdue for a breakout, and this muscular, well-written mystery might be the one. --Jane Adams
Literature & Fiction Books
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