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Bad Luck and Trouble (Jack Reacher) | 
enlarge | Author: Lee Child Publisher: Dell Category: Book
List Price: $7.99 Buy Used: $1.89 You Save: $6.10 (76%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 153 reviews Sales Rank: 484
Media: Mass Market Paperback Edition: Reprint Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 512 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8 Dimensions (in): 6.8 x 4.3 x 1.3
ISBN: 0440243661 Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54 EAN: 9780440243663 ASIN: 0440243661
Publication Date: March 25, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: just missing front cover, priced to sell quickly, 100% refunds for ANYONE not happy, we strive for 100% customer service
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com Ex-military cop Jack Reacher is the perfect antihero--tough as nails, but with a brain and a conscience to match. He's able to see what most miss and is willing to do whatever it takes to get the job done. Each book in Lee Child's smart, addictive series (The New York Times has referred to it as "pure escapist gold") follows the wandering warrior on a new adventure, making it easy to start with any book, including his latest gem, Bad Luck and Trouble. However, be forewarned...once you meet Jack Reacher, you'll be hooked, so be prepared to stock up on the series. --Daphne Durham
Who Is Jack Reacher? A Video from Lee Child
Watch the video | A Note from Lee Child
Two years ago I was on a book tour, promoting that year's new Jack Reacher novel, One Shot. One particular night, the event was held in a small town outside of Chicago. The date was June 21st. As I was giving my talk and answering questions and signing books, that date was nagging away at the back of my mind. I knew it had some significance. I started panicking--had I forgotten my anniversary? No, that's in August. My wife's birthday? No, that's in January. My own birthday? No, that's in October.
Then suddenly I remembered--it was ten years to the day since I had been fired from my previous job. That was why and how I had become a writer. That night in Illinois was a ten-year anniversary of a different sort, somewhat bittersweet.
And ten is a nice round number. So I started thinking about my old colleagues. My workmates, my buddies. We had been through a lot together. I started to wonder where they all were now. What were they doing? Were they doing well, or struggling? Were they happy? What did they look like now? Pretty soon I was into full-on nostalgia mode. Ten-year anniversaries can do that to a person. I think we all share those kind of feelings, about high school, or college, or old jobs we've quit, or old towns we've moved away from.
So I decided to make this year's Jack Reacher book about a reunion. I decided to throw him back among a bunch of old colleagues that he hadn't seen for ten years, people that he loved fiercely and respected deeply. Regular Reacher readers will know that he's a pretty self-confident guy, but I wanted him to wobble just a little this time, to compare his choices with theirs, to measure himself against them.
The renewed get-together isn't Reacher's own choice, though. And it's not a standard-issue reunion, either. Something very bad has happened, and one of his old team-members from the army contacts him, by an ingenious method (it's hard to track Reacher down). She gives him the bad news, and asks him to do something about it. He says, "Of course I'll do something about it."
"No," his friend says. "I mean, I want you to put the old unit back together."
It's an irresistible invitation. Wouldn't we all like to do that, sometimes? --Lee Child
Secrets of the Series: A Q&A with Lee Child
Q: Why do you think readers keep coming back to your novels? A: Two words: Jack Reacher. Reacher is a drifter and a loner with a strong sense of justice. He shows up, he acts, he moves on. He's the type of hero who has a long literary history. Robin Hood, the Lone Ranger, Aragorn from The Lord of the Rings, Jack Reacher--they're all part of the same heroic family. Reacher just ratchets it up a notch. Maybe more than a notch. Why is he so appealing? Most often people say to me it's his sense of justice; he will do the right thing. Even though there is no reward in it for him, even though there is often a high cost to be paid by him, he will always try to do the right thing and people find that reassuring in today's world when not too many people are doing the right thing.
Q: Jack Reacher gets compared to James Bond, Jack Bauer and Jason Bourne, each of whom now has a "face." In a movie, which actor do you think could fill Reacher's shoes? A: That's the toughest question. The thing about Reacher is he's huge; he's 6'5" tall and about 250 pounds. There aren't any actors that size--actors tend to be small. So we aren't going to find a physical facsimile for Reacher because there aren't any. We have to find someone who is capable of looking big on the screen. Many people have said to me a young Clint Eastwood would have been perfect--we need someone like that who has the vibe of a big intimidating man. Hopefully there will be somebody available like that. It's also a question of finding somebody ready to sign up for more than one movie. They want to make a franchise, minimum of three, and that makes it a little bit harder.
Q: What research is involved in writing one of your stories? A: My research is all kind of backwards. I don't go to the public library for three months and take notes in advance; instead my best research is by remembering and adapting. I read, travel, and talk to people just for the fun of it, filing away these interesting little snippets to the back of my mind and eventually they float to the surface and get used. The problem is, I approach writing the book with the same excitement and impatience that I hope the reader is going to feel about reading it. But even so, I need a certain measure of technical intrigue in the story. There is specific research I have to do as I go along, anything that's a small detail; a car, a gun, a type of bullet. I will check that out at the time. But, that's what I call the detail--the broad stuff is the stuff I already know.
Meet Jack Reacher  The Killing Floor |  Die Trying |  Tripwire |  Running Blind |  Echo Burning |
 Without Fail |  Persuader |  The Enemy |  One Shot |  The Hard Way |
Product Description From a helicopter high above the empty California desert, a man is sent free-falling into the night…. In Chicago, a woman learns that an elite team of ex–army investigators is being hunted down one by one.... And on the streets of Portland, Jack Reacher—soldier, cop, hero—is pulled out of his wandering life by a code that few other people could understand. From the first shocking scenes in Lee Child’s explosive new novel, Jack Reacher is plunged like a knife into the heart of a conspiracy that is killing old friends…and is on its way to something even worse.
A decade postmilitary, Reacher has an ATM card and the clothes on his back—no phone, no ties, and no address. But now a woman from his old unit has done the impossible. From Chicago, Frances Neagley finds Reacher, using a signal only the eight members of their elite team of army investigators would know. She tells him a terrifying story—about the brutal death of a man they both served with. Soon Reacher is reuniting with the survivors of his old team, scrambling to raise the living, bury the dead, and connect the dots in a mystery that is growing darker by the day. The deeper they dig, the more they don’t know: about two other comrades who have suddenly gone missing—and a trail that leads into the neon of Vegas and the darkness of international terrorism.
For now, Reacher can only react. To every sound. Every suspicion. Every scent and every moment. Then Reacher will trust the people he once trusted with his life—and take this thing all the way to the end. Because in a world of bad luck and trouble, when someone targets Jack Reacher and his team, they’d better be ready for what comes right back at them…
From the Hardcover edition.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 148 more reviews...
Read Them All, and This Was My Favorite May 10, 2008 It's odd. First, we have a truly incredible superhero or super antihero, who thinks detailed actions in milliseconds. Then we have a few technical glitches. Jack Reacher, this super-antihero, does everything but leap tall buildings in a single bound, but then there's always that possibility in the nest Jack Reacher novel. And with all that, it was a real page turner, so much so that I finished it on a red-eye while everyone else was fast asleep.
So, if you can suspend a little disbelief (as opposed to a lot of disbelief in the one where Reacher swims underwater 300 yards in full battle gear off the coast of Maine in the winter), this may be the best of Child's novels. It's almost as good as the best Saunders and Sanders books. Four-and-a-half stars.
A Great Read! May 6, 2008 Once again, Lee Child has produced an excellent Jack Reacher novel. I couldn't put it down, and I couldn't resist writing a few lines to give it the five stars it deserves. If you like thrillers with an edgy, intelligent, and rugged lead character, then Reacher is your man. Enjoy!
The best Reacher yet May 4, 2008 I love all of Lee Child's work, but this was my favorite to date. His writing is sharp, punchy, and surprisingly witty, even in some of the story's darkest moments. Great characters in a compelling page turner that I had trouble setting down. More than ever, I wanted to join Reacher's team. Highly recommended.
You lost me May 2, 2008 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
The main characters were facinating. Too many to keep straight and connected through the story. My interest ebbed and waned so there were times i had to try to force my attention back to what was going on. I enjoyed the dry humor and the readers style. I bought it to follow the Jack Reacher character but he was a totally different person.
Incredible writing but full of technical errors April 28, 2008 Let me be frank right from jump - I love Jack Reacher. I love the character, I love the stories. I love Lee Child's writing style. He's an amazing storyteller and his prose cracks with intensity. It's terse, nail-biting stuff. Hard Luck and Trouble does not disappoint in the writing department. It is all of the above and then some.
Unfortunately, a lot of it is wrong.
First, the basic plot-
Reacher is contacted by one of his old unit, requesting help. Reacher's old unit, it appears, are disappearing one by one. Then they start turning up dead. Someone has to do something because "You don't mess with the Special Investigators." But someone did, and Reacher and his surviving part of the unit is going to make them pay. Homeland Security, the Department of Defense, Vegas casinos, possible Islamic terrorists, and some cops - it makes for a volatile mix. And Reacher is just the guy to make the whole thing blow up.
Even in fiction, however, the story has to follow an internal logic. Reacher's stories, more often than not, have a fatal flaw or two written in them. Bad Luck and Trouble has more than a few.
We start with Reacher buying a one-way ticket, in cash, and then flying through an airport without having to go through the extra security screening someone buying such a ticket, with cash, would automatically earn (SSSS). Imagine if you were a security person and you get a guy like Reacher, flying with no bags, no checked luggage, nothing. Any halfway competent person would know there was something interesting here. Reacher would get the third degree.
We move onto a guy risking carrying a special knife and knuckles through airport security when he could just check it in his checked luggage. Why risk it? Imaginary Homeland Security records and checks that don't exist. Cop training that involves running around with no round in the chamber of the pistol (there is no such training). Pistols carrying more rounds in them than they do. People blowing things up and shooting and leaving evidence with their fingerprints all over things, yet no one finds them? No record checks? People snapping adult necks with one hand (no human on earth can do this). One armed chokes. It's all too ridiculous.
These factors may be aggravating to some and irrelevant to others, but when something is integral to the plot then the whole structure falls apart if the thing in question is impossible or doesn't exist. This happens too often in Reacher novels. Supposed clues that can't occur in the real world are used to move the story along. One has to suspend disbelief too much and that weakens the story. Which is, again, unfortunate because the writing really is top shelf. Most people would probably not notice or, if they did, not know how things work in the really real world. Professionals in the field (and a lot of us read Reacher novels) will and do.
The writing in Bad Luck and Trouble is all that I hoped it would be. I will continue to buy Reacher's story, because it's entertaining and well written. If Mr. Child would only do some research to smooth up some of the egregious errors it would be some of the best thriller work on the market. It's writing already is. Just do some due diligence and then it will earn the highest marks. Mr. Child just needs someone to tell him that he can make a book accurate and still be exciting and suspenseful. He can pull it off. He's one of the few suspense authors out there that doesn't need to resort to tricks. Reacher would demand that honesty. I just know it.
Recommended, but with reservations.
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