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Tripwire (Jack Reacher Series #3) by Lee Child — book cover

Tripwire (Jack Reacher Series #3)

by Lee Child
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Overview

In Tripwire, Reacher's lazy anonymity in Key West is shattered by a stranger who comes to town searching for him. Hours after his arrival, the stranger turns up beaten to death in the Old Town cemetery, and Reacher is forced to follow the man's cold trail back to New York to find the people who dispatched him in the first place; a bewildered and elderly couple still mourning an all-American son lost in Vietnam; an alluring and intelligent woman from Reacher's own haunted past; and at the center of the web, the most vicious opponent Reacher has ever faced.

Lee Child confirms his early acclaim with this new tale, as swift and stylish as any suspense novel written today.

About the Author, Lee Child

LEE CHILD is a #1 bestselling author worldwide. His debut novel, Killing Floor, won two awards for best first mystery and was nominated for two more. Foreign rights in the Jack Reacher series have been sold in ninety-five countries. The movie franchise stars Tom Cruise as Jack Reacher. Child, a native of England, is a former television director. He lives in New York City, where he is at work on his next Jack Reacher thriller.

Biography

Lee Child was born in 1954 in Coventry, England, but spent his formative years in the nearby city of Birmingham. By coincidence he won a scholarship to the same high school that JRR Tolkien had attended. He went to law school in Sheffield, England, and after part-time work in the theater he joined Granada Television in Manchester for what turned out to be an eighteen-year career as a presentation director during British TV's "golden age." During his tenure his company made Brideshead Revisited, The Jewel in the Crown, Prime Suspect, and Cracker. But he was fired in 1995 at the age of 40 as a result of corporate restructuring. Always a voracious reader, he decided to see an opportunity where others might have seen a crisis and bought six dollars' worth of paper and pencils and sat down to write a book, Killing Floor, the first in the Jack Reacher series.

Killing Floor was an immediate success and launched the series which has grown in sales and impact with every new installment.

Lee has three homes —an apartment in Manhattan, a country house in the south of France, and whatever airplane cabin he happens to be in while traveling between the two. In the US he drives a supercharged Jaguar, which was built in Jaguar's Browns Lane plant, thirty yards from the hospital in which he was born.

Lee spends his spare time reading, listening to music, and watching the Yankees, Aston Villa, or Marseilles soccer. He is married with a grown-up daughter. He is tall and slim, despite an appalling diet and a refusal to exercise.

Good To Know

Lee Child is the author of sixteen Jack Reacher thrillers, including the New York Times bestsellers Persuader, The Enemy, One Shot, The Hard Way, and #1 bestsellers Bad Luck and Trouble and Nothing to Lose. His debut, Killing Floor, won both the Anthony and the Barry awards for Best First Mystery, and The Enemy won both the Barry and Nero awards for Best Novel. Foreign rights in the Jack Reacher series have sold in forty territories. All titles have been optioned for major motion pictures.

Reviews

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Editorials

From Barnes & Noble

The Barnes & Noble Review
The third Jack Reacher adventure finds the ex-military policeman living in Key West, digging pools by day and working as a bouncer by night. After three months in the islands, Reacher is settling in to his relaxed lifestyle and thinking of staying for good. But his idyll is interrupted when he is approached twice in one day for information on one Jack Reacher, first by an amiable private investigator named Costello, then by a pair of hulking thugs hot on Costello's trail. Reacher sidesteps their questions by denying his identity, but is drawn into matters after Costello is found dead, the victim of a savage beating apparently administered by the two thugs.

Anxious to know what inspired this violence, Reacher tracks the detective to New York, where he discovers Costello was hired by a "Mrs. Jacob." Visiting Mrs. Jacob's home, a surprised Reacher is pleased to learn Mrs. Jacob is actually the former Jodie Garber, daughter of the recently deceased General Garber, Reacher's mentor and commanding officer when he worked with the military police. Jodie informs Reacher that her father was trying to contact him to request his assistance in uncovering the truth about a Vietnam-era MIA.

Reacher agrees to finish the job Garber started, bringing him into direct conflict with the men who killed Costello and with their boss, "Hook" Hobie, a horribly scarred master criminal who is only hours away from making the biggest score of his life. Hobie has a dark past, the details of which will upset his current operation should they come to light. Reacher's investigations put him on acollisioncourse with the sadistic Hobie, who, as his nickname implies, sports a metal hook on his right hand. Both Reacher and Hobie pursue their agendas, inching ever closer to their inevitable conflict at book's end, a bloody battle that leaves only one of them standing.

In reviews of previous Reacher books, Child was often criticized for relying too heavily on coincidence. Perhaps reacting to those comments, Child is more deliberate here — beneath the carnage and breakneck pace lies a carefully constructed, believable plot. But in the final analysis, it's not plot that recommends this novel. Rather, it's Child's cinematic approach to action scenes —Tripwire contains several brilliant sequences, each stunning in its profound violence and skillful execution. Child's approach to suspense is similar to Alfred Hitchcock's — although the audience thinks it knows what's coming, Child still manages to confound expectations.

In the hands of a lesser writer, this story could have easily spun out of control, lapsing into self-parody. Child, however, takes great pains to balance larger-than-life characters like Reacher and Hobie with a convincing supporting cast, using them to ground the novel in reality. He is also careful to show other sides of Reacher, who, with his impressive physical stature and penchant for violence, evokes such legendary fictional tough guys as Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer and Richard Stark's Parker. Yes, Reacher can take out a roomful of gunmen without breaking a sweat, but he's easily flustered by the woman he loves. A cool, competent, insightful investigator, he blanches at the very concept of home ownership. These small touches humanize Reacher, adding to his credibility.

Fans new to the Jack Reacher saga are to be envied — after finishing Tripwire, they can pick up its two predecessors, the multiple award-winning KILLING FLOOR and the equally well-received DIE TRYING. Those of us who have already read these thrillers will simply have to be patient and wait for the next installment. —Hank Wagner

Playboy

The guy must be channeling Dashiell Hammett.

Publishers Weekly

Jack Reacher, the hulking ex-soldier readers will remember from Child's first two thrillers, Die Trying and Killing Floor, can kill with his bare hands, and sports chest muscles thick enough to stop bullets. He's actually a dynamo of a character, wily in an innocent sort of way, and the anchor to one of the best new series in thriller fiction. Here, Reacher is incognito, living the life of a drifter and digging swimming pools in Key West. When a PI from New York comes looking for him, and shortly afterwards turns up dead with his fingertips sliced off, Reacher flies north and discovers that the instigator of the search is Leon Garber, his former army commanding officer. But Garber has died the day before Reacher arrives. As Reacher finds out from Jodie Jacob, Garner's beautiful attorney daughter, Garber was helping an elderly couple to locate their son, who supposedly died in a helicopter crash during the Vietnam War. The military won't confirm the death, however, or even classify the soldier as missing in action. Pursuing the search together, Reacher and Jacob narrowly escape murder attempts by a pair of dark-suited thugs who work for an evil corporate loan shark named "Hook" Hobie, who has a hideously disfigured face and a metal hook for a right hand. Hobie is harboring a terrible secret linking him to the couple's vanished son, and he'll kill anyone who tries to discover his diabolical past. A showdown between the two men is inevitable, and when it happens, it's a beaut — almost as good as Child's skillfully laid surprise ending and the crisp and original dialogue throughout. Reacher is a complex, contemplative brute whose aversion to social and material entanglements entail very peculiar habits and ideas. He never cleans his clothes, preferring to buy new ones (going to a dry cleaner implies a commitment to return); and he's spellbinding whether kicking in doors or just kicking around a thought in his brain.

< Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.

Library Journal

Jack Reacher is retired from his career as a military policeman and settled into a low-profile life in Key West, FL. Alas, the calm is not to last. A man turns up murdered in the cemetery, and Reacher realizes he was the murdered man's reason for coming to the city. He then launches a search to discover who is behind the killing. The trail leads from sunny Key West to gritty and glitzy New York, a tortuous maze that involves an elderly couple who believe their son is a POW in Vietnam, the daughter of Reacher's deceased friend, and a man deeply in debt to a truly chilling villain. Dick Hill does a good job of keeping the pace, knowing when to pick up the tempo and when to lay back. His women don't really sound like women, though the characters' personalities do come through, which is this reviewer's measure of a good reading. Child (Die Trying) has written an intelligent thriller with plenty of action, believable characters, and just enough suspense to keep the listener on edge. A few details don't ring true: for example, in the United States, one usually looks for property records at the Register of Deeds, not at the public library. But this is not a work for deep reflection; it's an action ride. A worthy addition for the suspense/thriller section of public libraries.--Nancy Paul, Brandon P.L., WI Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.

San Francisco Chronicle

Reacher is refreshingly human and vulnerable.

Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Mag

This one isn't for the squeamish or faint of heart...

Playboy

The guy must be channeling Dashiell Hammett.

Kirkus Reviews

A good guy outsmarts a venomous viper, outguns a gazillion villains—and falls in love with a nice gal. Continuing at loose ends after being separated from the Army (the peace dividend, you know), former MP Major Jack Reacher (Die Trying, 1998, etc.) is down in Key West rather enjoying irresponsibility—until a private investigator shows up looking for him. The following day the p.i. turns up dead, fingertips sliced off for the purpose of preserving his incognito. Something nefarious is going on here, Reacher concludes, stirred by a burst of the old action-hero adrenaline. All he knows for sure, however, is that the detective was hired by a Ms. Jacob. Pause for a deductive leap or two, then on to New York to track down the mysterious Ms. Jacob. But what's in a name? It soon develops that Ms. J isn't mysterious at all. In fact, she's an old friend. Before she was married, the Ms. J., now divorced, was a J already—Jodie Garber, daughter of General Garber, Reacher's erstwhile commanding officer and mentor. Reacher last saw her when she was 15 and in the throes of a violent crush on him. Now she's 30, and as gorgeous as you might have guessed. Among other things, she needs Reacher to finish a task begun by her recently deceased father. Reacher accepts the mission, of course, and is immediately in confrontation with a sadistic demon, obligatorily brilliant, whose intricate scam has roots in Vietnam and whose pleasure in killing and maiming is unconfined. But love (for Jodie) has not blunted Reacher's martial capabilities, and from a climactic one-on-one with Hook (the sadistic demon) Hobie, he emerges scathed but triumphant. Unabashedly mindless but fun: Reacherswashbuckles with the best of them. (Literary Guild featured alternate)

Book Details

Published
December 31, 2012
Publisher
Penguin Group (USA) Incorporated
Pages
416
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780425264393

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