Echo Burning, by Lee Child is the fifth in the thriller series which features man-of-action, Jack Reacher. The ex-military cop gets into an altercation in a bar one evening. He doesn't think anything of this until the next morning, when a police car pulls into his motel car park, and one of the policemen who gets out of the car is the bloke he came to blows with! Reacher decides on a tactical retreat and heads out to the nearest main road to hitch a lift in the searing Texan heat. He is stunned to be picked up by an attractive Mexican lady within a few minutes. Of course, it was too good to be true. She starts to ask him a set of questions that make him feel like he's having a job interview. It turns out she is desperate for someone to help her "deal with" her violent Texan husband, who is soon to be released from prison. She claims he has been beating her since they got married and cannot face him coming home and starting the abuse all over again. Her ideal is that the husband meets a sticky end, but Reacher won't go for that. He agrees to go back home with her to help keep an eye on her, but keeps trying to persuade her to report the husband to the police or to flee with her daughter, but she stubbornly refuses to do either. Needless to say, there is more to this situation than meets the eye. When the husband's lawyer, goes missing, alarm bells start to ring, and who, exactly, are the people watching the house?
For me, Echo Burning fell a little short of the usually excellent standard set by the author. I just could not believe that Reacher would stick around to get himself embroiled in such a deeply implausible tale as the one the woman was telling him. The first half of the book was overlong and not hugely credible. I know that in any thriller where the hero ALWAYS comes out on top, you do have to suspend your disbelief, but to make Echo Burning enjoyable, you have to take your disbelief and hide it under the bed in a box labelled saying Do Not Open Until 2016! However, in the second half of the book, the action really gets going, and the tale takes off and finds its feet - it's just a shame it took so long to do so. I am hoping this is just a small blip in an otherwise excellent series, and it was certainly good enough to read the next chapter in Reacher's story.
My STAR rating: THREE.
Length: 576 print pages.
Price I paid: Free, borrowed as an ebook from my local library.
Formats available: print; abridged audio CD; unabridged audio download; ebook.
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