The midnight line
(2017)

Fiction

eBook

Provider: cloudLibrary

Details

PUBLISHED
[S.l.]: Random House Publishing Group, 2017
DESCRIPTION

384 p

ISBN/ISSN
9780399593499 ov8obr9
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

#1 New York Times bestselling author Lee Child returns with a gripping new powerhouse thriller featuring Jack Reacher, “one of this century's most original, tantalizing pop-fiction heroes” (The Washington Post). Reacher takes a stroll through a small Wisconsin town and sees a class ring in a pawn shop window: West Point 2005. A tough year to graduate: Iraq, then Afghanistan. The ring is tiny, for a woman, and it has her initials engraved on the inside. Reacher wonders what unlucky circumstance made her give up something she earned over four hard years. He decides to find out. And find the woman. And return her ring. Why not? So begins a harrowing journey that takes Reacher through the upper Midwest, from a lowlife bar on the sad side of small town to a dirt-blown crossroads in the middle of nowhere, encountering bikers, cops, crooks, muscle, and a missing persons PI who wears a suit and a tie in the Wyoming wilderness. The deeper Reacher digs, and the more he learns, the more dangerous the terrain becomes. Turns out the ring was just a small link in a far darker chain. Powerful forces are guarding a vast criminal enterprise. Some lines should never be crossed. But then, neither should Reacher. Advance praise for The Midnight Line “Compulsively readable.” Publishers Weekly (starred review) “[A] multifaceted novel about dealing with the unthinkable . . . It's automatic: Reacher gets off a bus, and Child lands on the New York Times bestseller list.” Booklist “I just read the new Jack Reacher novel by Lee Child. . . . It is as good as they always are. I read every single one.” Malcolm Gladwell “The book is very smart . . . [and] suggests something that has not been visible in the series previous entries: a creeping sadness in Reacher's wanderings that, set here among the vast and empty landscapes of Wyoming, resembles the peculiarly solitary loneliness of the classic American hero. This return to form is also a hint of new ground to be covered.” Kirkus Reviews

Format: eBook

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