Wednesday, June 11, 2025

Book Review: A Wanted Man by Lee Child

I know more about Jack Reacher from the Tom Cruise and Alan Ritchson movies and series than from Lee Child's novels, having read only Killing Floor, the first in the series.

In keeping with the trend, I was prompted to read the 17th instalment, A Wanted Man, after watching Season 3 on Prime, which is based on Child's seventh book, Persuader.

Reacher's unintended exploits
or troubles, depending on how you see itbegin when he hitches a ride on a deserted highway to Nebraska with two men and a woman, ostensibly headed for Chicago. He's en route to Virginia to meet a girl. But once in the car, the highly decorated ex-military cop quickly senses something's off: the men appear friendly, making small talk, yet oddly evasive; the woman seems scared; and the route doesn't quite add up. His suspicion is confirmed when the woman, seated in the back, manages to warn him with a series of coded eye blinks through the rear-view mirror. Saying more would ruin the suspense for those who haven't read the book. 

Elsewhere, a Kansas sheriff is investigating the murder of a US trade attaché, a cover for a CIA station chief. The body, found at a nearby diner, is central to the plot of A Wanted Man.

Over the next forty-eight hours, Reacher finds himself in the middle of a dangerous situation that unfolds with each chapter. It involves conspiracy theories, an undercover operation, disappearing witnesses, and a potential terror plot with links to both domestic and Middle Eastern, likely Syrian, terrorists. Reacher teams up with Julia Sorenson, a sharp and initially reluctant FBI special agent from the Omaha field office, who's investigating the diplomat's murder. The plot spirals into a national security issue, pulling in FBI agents from other field offices, the State Department and the CIA.

A Wanted Man is a slow-building thriller that moves at a steady pace
a departure, I assume, from many of the other Reacher novels and their screen adaptations. Reacher spends considerable time thinking and analysing each situation before making his move. For example, he's admirably restrained as the two men drive for hoursacross state lines, through Nebraska, Kansas and Ohiowithout quite reaching their destination. He resists the urge to confront them, choosing instead to bide his time so he can get to the bottom of who they are and what they're actually up to. Here, Lee Child captures the tension of the seemingly endless road trip really well.

The ending is trademark Reacher, though. He storms in, guns blazing, for a high-stakes showdown inside an abandoned, blast-proof military installation
likened to a capsized battleshipin the middle of nowhere. It's so massive that the author details its secretive interior over several pages. I had trouble picturing it in my head.

I was so impressed with Lee Child's writing in Killing Floor
precise, with clipped sentencesthat I promised myself I'd read more of his books. In A Wanted Man, I especially liked how Child effortlessly repeats certain words and phrases across consecutive sentences within the same paragraph. I don't recall coming across that style in anything else I've read. Hopefully, A Wanted Man will spur me to pick up more of his novels.