Author:Lee Child
Published exclusively as an ebook, a long short story from thriller master Lee Child about the teenage Reacher, now also available in No Middle Name: the Collected Jack Reacher Stories.
July 1977. Jack Reacher is almost seventeen, and he stops in New York on his way from South Korea to visit his brother at West Point. The summer heat is suffocating, fires are raging in the Bronx, the city is bankrupt, and the mad gunman known as Son of Sam is still on the loose.
Reacher meets a woman with a problem, and agrees to help her . . . and then the power grid fails and the lights go out, plunging the lawless city that never sleeps into chaos.
What does a visiting teenager do in the dark? If that visiting teenager is Jack Reacher, the answer is: plenty.
Don’t miss the exciting preview of Lee Child’s latest Jack Reacher novel, Never Go Back!
A vivid, macabre and wise novel
—— New York TimesHis ability to spin eerie parables out of a little-known national history makes his books an addictive pleasure
—— Jonathan Romney , Independent on SundayA compelling investigation into language and myth, politics and power, by the renowned, infinitely talented Albanian novelist
—— Booklist[Kadare] is seemingly incapable of writing a book that fails to be interesting
—— New York TimesIn Ismail Kadare's fictional worlds creation and destruction are entwined, and how he illuminates the human cost of their varied pairings is the source of his greatness as a writer
—— Chicago TribuneLittle in the modern canon is more locally remote from us than the writing of the Albanian novelist Ismail Kadare, and not much is more universal in its reach… Kadare, who lived under the dictator Enver Hoxha until moving to France, is a supreme fictional interpreter of the psychology and physiognomy of oppression
—— New York TimesA prolific and stylistically versatile author who has sought to explain his problematic country through massive political epics as well as in novellas that variously take shape as allegories, folk tales, magical autobiography or ancient Albanian history
—— IndependentKadare and Andric share a sense of incisive imagery, all too relevant, in which a Balkan bridge links present and future, at the sacrifice of humanity
—— Boston GlobeWorks brilliantly well
—— Mail on SundaySuperb
—— ScotsmanThe late Ian Fleming would surely have approved
—— Daily MailBrilliant
—— SpectatorKeeps us on our toes until the closing pages
—— Financial TimesTerrific… A tremendous Bond story
—— Sunday TimesExciting stuff… Mission accomplished, Mr Boyd
—— SunManages to enrich and refresh a character we thought we knew too well. Solo is a terrific twisting thriller – just when you smugly think you have spotted a huge hole in the plot, Boyd turns it breathtakingly around.
—— David Mills , Sunday TimesSince the death of Ian Fleming, plenty of writers have tried their hand at perpetuating the career of James Bond, with mixed results. Boyd’s Solo is undoubtedly one of the best.
—— Mail on SundayA triumphant thriller worthy of Bond’s creator Ian Fleming.
—— Daily ExpressI found myself wondering if Boyd had outdone Fleming.
—— Nicholas Lezard , Guardian[Boyd is] an ideal writer of James Bond novels, and this one, his first, is very good
—— William Leith , Evening StandardPerfectly judged homage
—— Mail on SundayA brand new James Bond adventure combining all the glamour and excitement of Fleming’s original novels with the masterful storytelling of William Boyd
—— Western Morning NewsA very good piece of literary ventriloquism, with a great baddie
—— Heathrow ExpressFleming’s James Bond lives again in this perfectly judged homage
—— Mail on Sunday