Author:Lee Child
"Including a new novella, the clever, twisty tales reveal that even 13-year-old Reacher was a force to be reckoned with." (Sunday Mirror)
This is the first time all Lee Child's shorter fiction featuring Jack Reacher has been collected into one volume.
Jack 'No Middle Name' Reacher, lone wolf, knight errant, ex military cop, lover of women, scourge of the wicked and righter of wrongs, is the most iconic hero for our age.
Read together, these twelve stories shed new light on Reacher's past, illuminating how he grew up and developed into the wandering avenger who has captured the imagination of millions around the world.
The twelve stories include a brand new novella, Too Much Time.
The other stories in the collection are:
Second Son
James Penney's New Identity
Guy Walks Into a Bar
Deep Down, High Heat
Not a Drill
Small Wars
All of which have previously been published as ebook shorts.
Added to these is every other Reacher short story that Child has written:
Everyone Talks
Maybe They Have a Tradition
No Room at the Motel
The Picture of the Lonely Diner
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And be sure not to miss Reacher's newest adventure, no.27, No Plan B! ***OUT NOW***
After 21 missions in 20 years no one can be in any doubt that messing up bad guys is what the ex-military policeman does best — and these 12 tall tales suggest he’s been doing it all his life... Lee Child, like his creation, always knows exactly what he’s doing — and he does it well. Time in his company is never wasted. The first three chapters of his next Reacher novel, The Midnight Line — due in November — leave you wanting more.
—— Mark Sanderson , Evening StandardThe Midnight Line...won't be published until early November. This collection of every short story Child has penned about the rootless Reacher will serve to keep any cravings at bay...True fans will love this.
—— Irish IndependentIf you ever wonder about the past of Jack Reacher - the action hero whose adventures shift millions - then get this collection of short stories. Including a new novella, the clever, twisty tales reveal that even the 13-year-old Reacher was a force to be reckoned with.
—— Sunday MirrorBooks by Cathy Bramley are brilliantly life affirming
—— Good HousekeepingFull of joy and fun
—— Milly JohnsonCathy Bramley serves up the perfect concoction of charm and escapism
—— Sunday ExpressI loved this book, and I want Nina to be my new best friend! She is brilliant.
—— Rachael Lucas, author of Wildflower BayBoyd is dependably a master of what's most true: an always elegant realist whose characters will get under your skin
—— GQNo one charts the highs and lows of the human condition like Boyd
—— RedA riveting short story collection from one of the best
—— Woman & HomeVaried, entertaining
—— Daily MailSpiky, sparking and simply brilliant
—— Sunday MirrorEnjoyably spot-on
—— Sunday TimesWhat Boyd does so mesmerisingly...is make the insignificant utterly significant...you are confronted by the full force of Boyd's undeniable talent for storytelling, as he inventively plays with time and form, and infuses his prose with themes of lust, love and emotional incompetence
—— StylistWilliam Boyd is arguably one of Britain's finest living writers...compelling and highly entertaining
—— Sunday ExpressHe is a skilled and humorous storyteller, and his pleasure in exploring life's uncertainties is apparent
—— iBoyd delights in themes of deceit and getting one over on the competition...such finely-honed prose
—— Evening StandardQuite brilliant. There has been no decline in the wit, the style, the precise observation
—— The TabletThese stories, by one of Britain's most compelling authors about how the post is inescapable - from random encounters to impulsive acts - is funny and surprising
—— ElleBoyd has always been eloquent, his narratives memorably stylish
—— Literary ReviewSmart, funny and compelling
—— The Times Books of the YearA collection showing all her trademark qualities of pin-sharp observation and arresting expression.
—— Claire Harman , Evening StandardSpare, slightly chilly… Most of these 10 stories deliver cool shocks, but all are buoyed by an undercurrent of wry humour and pleasingly mellow irony.
—— Katherine A. Powers , Washington Post SundayThe stories in Tessa Hadley’s Bad Dreams…quivered with similar suppressed emotion, whether about grown-up sisters silently feuding, or a neglected schoolgirl whose longing for “life” sees her fall in with a bunch of predatory university students.
—— Anthony Cummins , Daily TelegraphA novelist at the top of her game.
—— Daily TelegraphBrilliant evocations of female frustration… The disappointments and misunderstandings cut deep. Hadley evokes time, place and emotion superbly well; she’s a great storyteller.
—— William Leith , Evening StandardSuperb.
—— Simon Shaw , The Mail on SundayShe deserves all the prizes. Hadley is psychologically acute, drily witty and absolutely wonderful on place. Her relative obscurity, then, is an unfathomable mystery . . . The female characters at the heart of her novels – clever, impulsive, not always wholly likable – are so finely drawn, I can never get them out of my head
—— Rachel Cooke , Observer[A] masterclass in writing about the edges of everyday life. This collection of short stories that all link to the Sunshine State captures loneliness, alienation, abandonment and inner resourcefulness in the most creative of tales.
—— Victoria SadlerFantastical tales ... You'll be swept up in a wild hurricane of a ride with this lyrical stories of fury and love, loss and hope.
—— NewsweekEach story is perfectly formed, exquisite, often troubling but there is something so brilliantly humane about her work.
—— Kate Hamer, Wales Art ReviewThe five darkly comic stories that comprise The Largesse of the Sea Maiden are befitting final testaments to [Johnson’s] wild originality... His sentences, like his plots, are full of gorgeous little shocks.
—— Irish Independent, *The best reads of 2018: Our critics name their top picks*