Child, Lee. Tripwire. G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1999.
In his Jack Reacher series, Child has created a character who men will admire and women will love. Amoral Reacher, a transient Vietnam vet, finds himself in all sorts of precarious situations that stretch credulity. But Child creates in Reacher a protagonist so silently charming and appealing, readers will willingly suspend their disbelief and go along for the fast-paced ride.
In Tripwire, Reacher is digging pools in Key West -- with a shovel --when a detective comes looking for him. The guy ends up dead and Reacher has the presence of mind to know that something is wrong. The clues lead him to a “kid-sister” figure from his past where he is drawn into discovering the fate of a Vietnam helicopter pilot. In the midst of uncovering the truth about the pilot, Reacher stumbles onto a coverup more than thirty years in the making.
Child's writing style moves along at a fast clip and dialog is often pithy and staccato. There is minimal profanity; sexual encounters are not very detailed, but are present; action-based violence can be gory at times. One strength of this series is that it is not a true series in that each Jack Reacer title is a stand-alone written in no chronological order. A new reader can jump in at any point.
Recommendations:
The Camel Club by David Baldacci (1st in Camel Club series)
Baldacci creates a similar strong rootless protagonist with a shady military history who operates against a government run amok and who is aided by righteous insiders. Like Child, this thriller series is action-packed, but sex and language are kept to an ungraphic minimum.
Baldacci creates a similar strong rootless protagonist with a shady military history who operates against a government run amok and who is aided by righteous insiders. Like Child, this thriller series is action-packed, but sex and language are kept to an ungraphic minimum.
Transfer of Power by Vince Flynn (1st in Mitch Rapp series)
Mitch Rapp, the CIA's top counterterrorism operative is called upon to settle an insurrection that has taken hostages at the White House and driven the president into hiding in his bunker. Fast pacing, brutal action and light romance round out this political thriller.
My Father The Spy: An Investigative Memoir by John H. Richardson
As his father lies dying, the author decides to investigate his father's government jobs that took them all over the world including Vienna after WWII, Manila and Vietnam at the onset of the conflict. He is stunned to discover that rather than being an attache to the US embassy, his father was one of the founding members of the CIA. This is a fascinating look at modern US history from an insider's perspective, as well as, a bold look at the author's family and their struggles with alcoholism. Riveting.
Warriors: An Infantryman's Memoir of Vietnam by Robert Tonsetic
This a fast-paced, realistic, unsentimental, but not unsympathetic look at a rifle company commander's experiences during the Vietnam War.
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