Gone Tomorrow

Jack Reacher, #13

eBook

Published May 19, 2009 by Delacorte.

ISBN:
978-0-440-33855-0
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(23 reviews)

1 NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • THE BLOCKBUSTER JACK REACHER SERIES THAT INSPIRED TWO MAJOR MOTION PICTURES AND THE STREAMING SERIES REACHER

“High-powered, intricately wrought suspense.”—Janet Maslin, The New York Times

New York City. Two in the morning. A subway car heading uptown. Jack Reacher, plus five other passengers. Four are okay. The fifth isn’t. And if you think Reacher isn’t going to get involved . . . then you don’t know Jack.

Susan Mark, the fifth passenger, had a big secret, and her plain little life was being watched in Washington, and California, and Afghanistan—by dozens of people with one thing in common: They’re all lying to Reacher. A little. A lot. Or just enough to get him killed. A race has begun through the streets of Manhattan, a maze crowded with violent, skilled soldiers on all sides of a shadow war. For Jack Reacher, a man who trusts …

5 editions

reviewed Gone Tomorrow (Jack Reacher, #13)

one of the less than average Reacher books (so far)

this Reacher installment has all the competence porn of a normal Reacher book, but lacks some of the plot coherency. to be honest, I'm not expecting things to reflect the real world, but I'd like them to follow some basic logic. for example, unnamed Feds disappear key witnesses, and then later put out APBs and release names to the press. if they're going to be blacks ops, be black ops. black ops don't reveal their presence to massive numbers of cops and the press. can't keep secrets that way. lazy plotting in this book.

Review of 'Gone Tomorrow' on 'Goodreads'

Gone Tomorrow is an excellent return to form for Lee Child after the horror that was Nothing to Lose. As a first-person Reacher novel, you get Reacher narration 100% of the time, which already means this novel is going to be pretty awesome. That said, if you don't like first-person, you don't have much to worry about. You get very little of Reacher's internal thoughts and analysis, but there's a few first-person narration points where Reacher implies something about the future... like "oh I hadn't met them yet". I find that kind of foreshadowing to be cheap, especially since there's no indication that Reacher is telling this story to anyone else. But otherwise the first-person narration is purely style over substance.

Speaking of which... the antagonists are competent but nothing special, and while the plot unfolds in a very satisfying and multi-layered way, there were a number of twists that …

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Subjects

  • Fiction, thrillers, general
  • Reacher, jack (fictitious character), fiction
  • Terrorism, fiction
  • New york (n.y.), fiction
  • Fiction, thrillers