The Enemy (Jack Reacher, No. 8) | 
enlarge | Author: Lee Child Publisher: Dell Category: Book
List Price: $7.99 Buy Used: $0.01 You Save: $7.98 (100%)
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Rating: 139 reviews Sales Rank: 4272
Media: Mass Market Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 496 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6 Dimensions (in): 6.9 x 4.3 x 1.3
ISBN: 0440241014 Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54 EAN: 9780440241010 ASIN: 0440241014
Publication Date: April 26, 2005 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Millions of satisfied customers and climbing. Thriftbooks is the name you can trust, guaranteed. Spend Less. Read More.
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Jack Reacher. Hero. Loner. Soldier. Soldier’s son. An elite military cop, he was one of the army’s brightest stars. But in every cop’s life there is a turning point. One case. One messy, tangled case that can shatter a career. Turn a lawman into a renegade. And make him question words like honor, valor, and duty. For Jack Reacher, this is that case.
New Year’s Day, 1990. The Berlin Wall is coming down. The world is changing. And in a North Carolina “hot-sheets” motel, a two-star general is found dead. His briefcase is missing. Nobody knows what was in it. Within minutes Jack Reacher has his orders: Control the situation. But this situation can’t be controlled. Within hours the general’s wife is murdered hundreds of miles away. Then the dominoes really start to fall.
Two Special Forces soldiers—the toughest of the tough—are taken down, one at a time. Top military commanders are moved from place to place in a bizarre game of chess. And somewhere inside the vast worldwide fortress that is the U.S. Army, Jack Reacher—an ordinarily untouchable investigator for the 110th Special Unit—is being set up as a fall guy with the worst enemies a man can have.
But Reacher won’t quit. He’s fighting a new kind of war. And he’s taking a young female lieutenant with him on a deadly hunt that leads them from the ragged edges of a rural army post to the winding streets of Paris to a confrontation with an enemy he didn’t know he had. With his French-born mother dying—and divulging to her son one last, stunning secret—Reacher is forced to question everything he once believed…about his family, his career, his loyalties—and himself. Because this soldier’s son is on his way into the darkness, where he finds a tangled drama of desperate desires and violent death—and a conspiracy more chilling, ingenious, and treacherous than anyone could have guessed.
From the Hardcover edition.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 134 more reviews...
Not the Drifter December 29, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Never disapppointing, Child gives us the toughest ongoing character in fiction. this time, Reacher's not a drifter, but back in MP uniform. If I was a bad as reacher, I'd finally make the neighbor's dog stop barking and it wouldn't be pleasant for anyone watching including the dog. Child is an author who grows and grows. Ron Lealos author of Don't Mean Nuthin'
Jack Reacher Rocks-The Plot Sucks December 16, 2008 Jack Reacher is super cool and that's a fact. But the plot of this novel reeks. Gays in Delta Force? That's a tough sell. Yes, there are gays in the military, and they do a great job, but in Delta Force? I don't buy it. And Armor officers murdering people to ensure the future of Abrams tanks. Nope... that's plain silly and stupid. Come on Lee! Give us Reacher, but in a plot that's semi-believable.
The world needs more Jack Reacher's! August 13, 2008 Child rarely disappoints. Jack Reacher makes my day. I wish he was real!
So Well Constructed August 12, 2008 The bottom line is there is a payoff to everything. I'm reading the Child stuff in no particular order so at first I thought maybe this early stuff was a lesson in how Child changed over the years. Perhaps how he learned to cut out the unnecessary parts. I thought the long first visit with his mother (and brother) in France was pointless, but of course not. It comes back and it roars back with emotion and a direct impact on the character of Reacher. At first I thought some extraneous characters early on were bumps in the road, but of course not. They come back. In fact, pretty much everybody is in play. The beginning here shows how to start with a brilliant thread and watch how it can unravel a whole spool. That thread even includes the time and date of the year. I feel compelled to make a point about Child side by side with Michael Connelly. The fun is in watching Reacher and Bosch piece things together, seeing them press their own thinking, seeing them process tiny tidbits, storing them away like nuts for the winter until they are needed. Both Child and Connelly know how to slow the action down and dwell on the thought process itself, which is the fun of following a mystery-crime novel. And, finally, both authors ground their characters in real government agencies (at least in this book for Child) that feels real and adds a source of pressure to their main characters' challenges.
Reacher's relationship here with Summer is interesting and strong and Reacher isn't afraid to use her as a sounding board, even as a resource. I would still say the search for the crowbar scene was much too long. So are some of the time-killing scenes in Paris, but only by comparison to the other fast-track action. Some of the driving around and flying around gets a bit tedious, but there are even insights there which are enjoyable. The finish is right up there, even across multiple time zones and with action that is over the top. I really have no idea why this wouldn't make a great movie; you'd just need to clip a few of the scenes with, well, padding. For completists, of course, you'll read this. For those who are only going to read a few, this might be a good choice, particularly if you want to see Reacher working within the Army bureaucracy and before he became the near mythical drifter-stranger-problem solver that he is in 2008.
OK, some of the criticisms are warrented, but June 24, 2008 I still think this is my favorite Reacher novel so far (June 2008). So the author isn't up on USA military history and protocol, and pulled a couple of real bloopers like the location of Fort Irwin. But he makes up for it with great characters and some great comments (like the difference between what happens if you run your HumVee over unexploded ordinance versus a desert tortoise).
Most "thriller" stories require that the reader suspend belief if you know anything at all about the specialized subject matter; novels with techie subjects like computers are almost always full of awful mistakes. So what if this one blew the military stuff here and there, it's still a great story about one of the best characters in thriller fiction today. I loved it, and even found myself "page turning" at 3am on a second read a month later. Anyone who loves Reacher has got to love this "prequel" to the Reacher series.
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