Jack Reacher Series #1: Killing Floor — book review | |
Every great book series has to start somewhere, and this is where the Jack Reacher series started… | |
Roughly two years ago, I reviewed the Tom Cruise movie: “Jack Reacher“. I enjoyed the movie, found out it was based on a book series and put it down on my list of things to look into later. Last month I finally got around to reading one of the novels in the series: (“The Enemy“). That book was actually the eighth book in the series, but I decided to read it first because it was a prequel to his leaving the military and starting out his civilian career. I was hoping to jump into the series with background from before the series. As it turns out, this was probably a great idea. | |
The book I just finished: “Killing Floor” (1997©) written by Lee Child, is the first in the series and begins shortly after Reacher has left the Army and more or less relates the story of his becoming a Paladin (of sorts). Although Reacher considers himself to be a fairly amoral person who doesn’t want to get involved with other people’s problems, in the end (actually, very early in each story) we see that, in fact, he chooses sides, and it’s usually for “right” as he understands it or for whomever he judges to be the underdog in any given situation. | |
Without giving too much of the book away, the death of someone close leads to the “decision” to help. There are “very bad” bad guys. There is murder. There is money (the root of all evil). There is an indifferent local populace and, of course, the beautiful damsel and the righteous hero. There are twenty books in the series, so the hero always survives (ho-hum). | |
If I have one complaint (comment), it is the typical criminal mystery / drama / action story tendency to have the hero “intuitively” solve the mystery around 90% of the way through the book and then not tell us what (or how) he figured out the answer. Instead, the hero spends the remainder of the book unraveling the proof for us so everyone else in the story (and us) are left to recognize how smart Reacher is. Despite this minor fault, the movie and the two books I’ve read have all been very entertaining. Final recommendation: strong to high. A fast read with a good mystery, action, non-graphic sex and the bad guys get their just desserts in the end. One other side comment, I now understand (and agree with) the folks who complained about Tom Cruise playing Reacher in the movie. Cruise gets away with the role (adequately if you’ve not read any of the books), but he is NOT Jack Reacher. | |
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On This Day In: | |
2015 | Avengers Assemble II |
But If I Had To Perish Twice… | |
2014 | Turning Pages |
2013 | We Are All Accountable |
2012 | American Sign Language |
2011 | Happy Disproof |
2010 | Book Review – Managing Your Government Career |
Starting To Be A Reacher
May 4, 2016 by kmabarrett
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