The Enemy (Jack Reacher Series #8) by Lee Child

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(Mass Market Paperback - Reprint)

Average Customer Rating: Customer Rating for this product is 4.5 out of 5 (20 ratings)

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Synopsis

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 oncebelieved…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.


The New York Times - Janet Maslin

… most of The Enemy concentrates on the widening military murder plot, and on defining Reacher as a determined enforcer. In a world full of changing boundaries and moral ambiguities, he emerges as a classic noir loner, and a very charismatic one, despite his willingness and ability to inflict damage on those who he thinks deserve it. It is worth underscoring that these books, while crackling with assertiveness, do not present Reacher as a loose cannon. They avoid the ugliness of an action hero with too free a hand.

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Biography

Lee Child is the author of eleven Jack Reacher thrillers, including The New York Times bestsellers Persuader, the Barry Award Winner The Enemy, and One Shot, which has been optioned for a major motion picture by Paramount Pictures. His debut, Killing Floor, won both the Anthony and the Barry Awards for Best First Mystery. Foreign rights in the Jack Reacher series have sold in more than 40 territories. Child, a native of England and former television writer, lives in New York City and France, where he is at work on his next thriller, which Delacorte will publish in 2008.

Customer Reviews

Number of Reviews: 20
Average Rating: Customer Rating for this product is 4.5 out of 5
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Customer Rating for this product is 5 out of 5 Another good book
Rosemary, someone that loves to read, 10/21/2005

This is the second Lee Child book that I have read and I enjoyed it as much as the first one (Die Trying), and I look forward to the next. I find it amazing the way he brings everything together and how it fits one piece into another.

Customer Rating for this product is 2 out of 5 Nothing Great
xander, a high school student, 07/09/2005

I love books a lot but this one i just couldnt get into. everything seemed to take forever and and when it was all said and done i was not satisfied at all! The big dramatic plot twists twisted only my hatred for spending ten dollars on it. Just becasue a book says 'New York Times bestseller' does not mean it is a good book.

Also recommended: The Fountainhead, 1776, Deception Point.

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