Exit Strategy
A Reacher Novel
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3.6 • 57 Ratings
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- $16.99
Publisher Description
#1 NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • Jack Reacher will make three stops today. Not all of them were planned for. The “blockbuster” (Esquire) new Jack Reacher thriller from #1 New York Times bestselling authors Lee Child and Andrew Child, featuring “the best villain yet” (USA Today)!
Don’t miss the hit streaming series Reacher!
First—a Baltimore coffee shop. A seat in the corner, facing the door. Black coffee, two refills, no messing around. A minor interruption from two of the customers, but nothing he can’t deal with swiftly. As he leaves, a young guy brushes against him in the doorway. Instinctively Reacher checks the pocket holding his cash and passport. There’s no problem. Nothing is missing.
Second—a store to buy a coat. Nothing fancy. Something he can ditch when he heads to warmer climates. Large enough to fit a man the size of a bank vault. As he pulls out his cash, he finds something new in his pocket. A handwritten note. A desperate plea for help.
Third—wherever this bend in the road takes him. Impressed by the guy’s technique and intrigued by the message, Reacher makes it his mission to find out more . . .
APPLE BOOKS REVIEW
A stranger’s note sends Jack Reacher on a hazardous journey to unravel a web of blackmail and murder in this action-packed thriller. The scrap-paper call for help leads him to a man named Nathan Gilmour. When Jack decides to neutralize the threat to Nathan, it pits them against a man hell-bent on creating and exploiting a brutal war. Lee Child and his brother Andrew crank up the stakes for Reacher in this instalment of the best-selling series. We especially enjoyed getting to know the human tank’s latest crew: steely Sabrina Patton and her understandably jittery co-worker Gilmour. The Child brothers have also come up with an excellently hissable adversary in ruthless security company bigwig Morgan Strickland. Get ready for another riveting round of vigilante justice, Reacher-style.
Customer Reviews
Another devastated bad guy
Reacher hasn’t gone soft with age, in fact he seems ageless because once again he figures out how to create mayhem and put down the bad guy. Like always, it was a good read, if a bit wordy in some chapters.
No way!
I’ve been reading Reacher books from the beginning. Over the years Lee Child has been improving, refining, more action, more details making me second guess the endings. This book reads like Lee child has nothing much of any input. Their last book wasn’t bad but this book was a chore to get through, a lot of talking and mansplaining as if I didn’t understand what was going on. The last chapter now that’s a whole book in it self.