Thursday, 7 January 2016

The Enemy - How does Reacher get away with it?

I am a bit of a fan of the Jack Reacher novels by Lee Child, and have come to expect a bit of violence in these books. However, I have to say that I found some aspects of The Enemy quite shocking. In this, the eighth outing for Reacher, we go back in time to when Reacher is still a Military Policeman in the US army. It is New Year's Day, 1990. The Berlin Wall has just come down, and the old enemy is tucked up in bed, which means that things will need to change in the army, and not everyone is happy about this. Reacher has suddenly and surprisingly been posted to a new base, and the very next day, a two-star general is found dead in a sleazy motel nearby, apparently of a heart attack. Embarrassing for the military, particularly when the general's briefcase appears to be missing. Reacher heads off to inform the widow, only to find that she has been murdered in her own home. A coincidence? When another soldier is brutally murdered on the base, and Reacher's new boss orders him to put it down as a training accident, all his alarm bells start to ring, and, of course, he ignores those orders. The reader now follows our hero as he sets out to find out what is going on, but does the military really want him to succeed? At the same time, he finds out that his mother is dying and he tries to fit in visits to her in Paris in between his search for the truth. There is intrigue and plenty of action, and while I've got used to the Reacher "moral compass", one particular act by him was almost unbelievable and I am not entirely sure he could have got away with it, or indeed, should have. That said, there is much to admire in this book. The writing is sharp and lean, a bit like Reacher himself. You may not like everything you come across between the covers, but, somehow, you cannot help but keep on reading. The tension keeps on building throughout and when you come to the final page, you may feel a little disappointed. Not by the story itself, but because it's over! But there's always a new adventure for Reacher, with plenty more books in the series to be enjoyed.

STAR RATING: FOUR.

Length: 560 print pages.
Price I paid: Free, borrowed from library as an ebook.
Formats available: print; unabridged audio download; ebook.

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