Back on 17th September 2024, in an Northamptonshire church - it was Woodnewton, the location of another post about Coco the Clown - I came across a cluster of pre-owned paperbacks selling at 50p each. Among them, two of Lee Child's 'Jack Reacher' thrillers, Tripwire and Echo Burning - the third and fifth in the Reacher canon of twenty-five books, written from 1997 to 2019. That's twenty-four full-length novels and a collection of short stories. The series has continued, but in the hands of Lee Child's brother: not quite the same thing. I am sure that the latest books are just as exciting, but surely something would be missing, and I've neither bought them nor read them. This post is about the Reacher books written up to 2019.
Prior to investing a quid in the two Woodnewton books, I'd heard about the Reacher books many times from different people. It was clear that they were a good read, and I enjoy adventure thrillers. But I gathered that Reacher himself was a hulking muscle-man, and that didn't appeal.
Then I saw the 2012 film (based on the book One Shot) starring Tom Cruise in the Reacher role. It's widely thought that he was miscast, being short when Reacher is a giant, so that Cruise was physically wrong for the part. Even so, I enjoyed the film, finding the plot intriguing, and seeing at any rate that the character of Jack Reacher had depth. So the film put the notion of trying the books in my mind, and then it was just a question of time before I started buying them.
The very next day, 18th September 2024, I spotted Reacher book number one, Killing Floor in another church at Manton (in Rutland):
Another low-cost purchase. More early Reacher books followed - I was trying to read them in their proper order, and was by now hooked. But it would be expensive to buy them new. So I was raiding charity shops, and initially had some success. Soon however it became clear that only some of the books would ever be found in charity shops, and that I'd have to stump up and pay full price for most of them. I scorned purchasing from Amazon: I'm not going to be guilty of supporting that bloated enterprise if I can help it. Waterstones become my online source. Month by month I added to my Reacher collection, as this series of photos taken in my study from November 2024 to November 2025 shows. Gradually my previous crime/thriller collections took a back seat:
%20The%20best%20thrillers;%20Keymer,%20Home.JPG)
%20Books%20in%20Lucy's%20study;%20Keymer,%20Home.JPG)
%20Keymer,%20Home.JPG)
%20Keymer,%20Home.JPG)
Blue Moon was the last book I bought. By then, it was difficult to see what new situation the man could get into; and although he was still fit and strong, and living the itinerant life he loved, he was well into his forties and I didn't want to see him in decline. In one book he told another character that he would probably die alone and unheeded in a motel room, and I felt certain that this was indeed going to be his fate. Better to leave him when he was still intact and a force to be reckoned with.
So what was the fascination of Jack Reacher for me?
I think it was partly his personal nature, and partly the way Lee Child rounded him out with a interesting backstory. His father was American, his mother French. His father was a Marine, posted all over the world, and Jack Reacher and his brother Joe had the experience of being constantly uprooted when young. As boys, both were clever, personable, principled, and well able to stick up for themselves. They grew into men with a strong sense of purpose. Both had brains. Joe gravitated to intelligence work. Jack, more the man of action, did not want to be a Marine like his father, but found it natural to join the US Army (the family business, he felt) as a military policeman, rising to Major. His mental and physical skills suited him to the job: he was very good at it, and was widely respected. So when the Army began to slim down in the later 1990s and had no ongoing role for him, he felt discarded. Released from serving his country, he decided that he would roam America and gradually see it all. It would take a lifetime. He made sure that he ate well and kept fit. Never having owned anything that the Army hadn't kitted him out with, he carried just a toothbrush, a bank card and a roll of banknotes. He bought a fresh outfit of clothes every three days. No phone. No address. Once out of sight, he was untraceable. That's how he liked it. Impossible to do for long in this country, but feasible in the USA.
I should mention that Reacher, while a man with principles and standards, had no scruple about using lethal force against the bad people he inevitably encountered. He was an expert shot, invincible in a fight, and although he did occasionally get hurt, he always prevailed in the end. Although a loner, he was (while around) a staunch friend, and a sensitive lover, and possessed a wry sense of humour. He was also a mathematical savant, and carried in his head all kinds of encyclopaedic detail. A hint of autism perhaps.
Each book deals with an episode he got caught up in. Sometime it was just chance. Sometimes he just knowingly walked into a situation. Other times he worked with former colleagues. The overriding theme of the books is righting wrongs, often involving some kind of rescue, in situations that use Reacher's intelligence, his physical strength and skills, and his endurance. The reader may flinch at what he has to do to win out, but very time he comes through, then hits the road again.
He is no vigilante, but has a powerful sense of justice. Each book is thrilling and ends satisfactorily. Yet each is different, and I found that many were very memorable. Some - not all - contain scenes that I personally found gruesome or nightmarish. But although shocked that such things can happen, it won't put me off re-reading all my Jack Reacher books at some point soon.
Was all the stuff Lee Child wrote on guns, Army life, wounds and successful ways to fight completely authentic? Well, I felt that the author had taken great pains to get it right. It certainly impressed me. I also felt that if ever I were caught up in - say - a knife fight, what I read in these books might stand me in good stead.
Did I like Reacher as a character? On the whole yes. He would of course be a great companion in a dangerous situation. But after the crisis, he'd soon be gone. He wouldn't stick around. There would be no commitment. So he couldn't become a long-term friend. I felt rather sorry for the couple of women who were particularly drawn to him, but couldn't make anything permanent of it.
I am like him in that respect. I don't want a relationship. I haven't wanted one since 2009. And that's not going change.
I couldn't however go through life without a home, without possessions, without an archive of photos, and without the means to keep in touch with the people in my life. My personal motto is Stay alive, stay free - a sentiment Reacher might approve of - but I still need a base, a resting-place. I wouldn't like to die in an anonymous hotel room.
If you would like to give me feedback on this post, or make an enquiry, please email me from my Blog Profile.