It has been several books since I read a Jack
Reacher novel. For me, they had become entirely too predictable.
Reacher drifts into town, finds a more than friendly local cop or waitress,
cleans out the problem caused by entrenched locals, and moves out and on down
the road. Names and places changed, but the basic premise did not. Just like twelve
or more books later, the private detective still goes to the abandoned
warehouse at 2 am without a weapon or self-awareness, Reacher had become far
too predictable for me.
It also did not help that my reading speed and
concentration has dipped markedly for the last three years. Not only have I not
been able to resume my own writing, I simply don’t read as fast as I was used
to and have a far harder time tracking a story from start to finish. Reading
well enough to review is an increasingly rare phenomenon. I blame it on the
grief though it just as easily could be related to a couple of my disabilities
or some new medical freight train headed my way.
All that being said, thanks to Scott’s help, I was
able to get my hands on the new novel in eBook form via my local library. I
figured I would know soon enough if it was worth taking a look at. Within a few
pages, it was clear that The Sentinel: A Novel by Lee Child and
his brother, Andrew Child, (aka Andrew Grant) was a different Reacher novel.
It was also very good.
One week after Rusty Rutherford was fired from his
job, Jack Reacher shows up in the small town roughly seventy-five miles
northeast of Nashville, Tennessee. Rusty used to run the IT Department for the
town. For all intents and purposes, he was the IT Department. Things have gone
disastrously wrong. The town is now under a ransomware attack with critical
services no longer working. The local citizenry now hates his guts.
Reacher knows none of this and wants nothing more
than a cup of coffee and heads for the nearest coffee place he sees. As it
happens, it is the morning haunt of Mr. Rusty Rutherford. Not only did he get a
hostile reception in the place, Mr. Rutherford seems to be oblivious to the
fact as he moves down the sidewalk that he is headed into an even more hostile
reception. Rutherford being surrounded by several people in a carefully
orchestrated plan. They are closing in on him. Clearly an abduction is planned
as a car has moved into position at the mouth of the nearby alley. They have a
good plan and their target is oblivious. It would have worked too if Reacher
hadn’t decided to intervene.
He does and that sets off an intense seven days for
Rutherford, Reacher, and numerous folks in this tale of espionage, the cold
war, modern day computer technology, and a lot more. While Reacher is still
Reacher, the tale is complicated and reads very differently from earlier books
in the series. It also finds the spark that made the first books in the series
so very good.
If you have not been around the series for a while,
take a look at The Sentinel: A Novel by
Lee and Andrew Child. I suspect you will be pleasantly surprised as it is well
worth your time.
The Sentinel: A
Novel
Lee Child
Andrew Child
https://www.jackreacher.com/us/home-us/
Delacorte Press
(Penguin Random House)
http://www.randomhousebooks.com/books/635231/
October 2020
ASIN# B084FLW5KM
eBook (also
available in audio and print formats)
368 Pages
Review copy provided by the Dallas Public Library System.
Kevin R. Tipple ©2020
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