Amazon.co.uk Review
Breakneck in its pace, uncompromising in its narrative ruthlessness,
Persuader is typical of Lee Child's Jack Reacher adventures. After a first chapter that misdirects the reader quite staggeringly, ex-army freelance adventurer Reacher is apparently on the run. As always with Child and Reacher, what we see at first is only a small part of the complex plotting lying underneath. Reacher has his own reasons for taking on this case, reasons that are very personal and go back a decade. Being Reacher, tough with a heart of gold, his emotions--his liking for a drug dealer's wife and son, his more than professional interest in the DEA officer investigating them, his dislike of steroid-crazed thug Paulie--soon complicate his objectives. Childs is endlessly reliable on gadgets--the miniaturised e-mail senders, the big guns--and on action sequences--various fights and a swim in a riptide; he also makes us believe in complex emotions and deeper feelings than a love of violence. This is not one of the best of the Reacher books--it has too many flashbacks and a shadowy villain--but like all of them it is an action thriller for intelligent readers. --
Roz Kaveney
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
Review
This is not only a great addition to the Jack Reacher novels but a superb book in its own right. Reacher, the ex-military cop turned loner, walks into more trouble as he goes undercover to help federal agents expose Beck, a supposed drug-dealer. Reacher also has a chance meeting with Quinn, a dark element from Reacher's past. After ingeniously getting himself employed by Beck, Reacher finds that everything is not what it seems. Is Quinn involved somehow? Persuader is dazzling. Told in first-person perspective, the blend of dialogue, atmosphere, action and plot will grip readers from the first page and will further cement Lee Child's reputation as a world-class thriller writer, even more so considering this is the seventh Jack Reacher novel. This is everything a thriller should be
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
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