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203 pages, Kindle Edition
First published August 14, 2025
I buy Jack Reacher books when they come out, but I (correctly) felt this one would be stretching that habit a little too far. So I waited a few weeks for the Portsmouth (NH) Public Library's copy to show up on the shelves.
It's short, a mere 221 pages, including a new Reacher 23-page short story. In which Jack manages to help a damsel in distress, beat up a bunch of lowlifes, and solve a minor mystery. Not a major literary milestone, but a decent amount of fun.
The remainder of the book is Lee Child's 24 "introductions" to collector's editions of his Lee-only novels, written between 1997 and 2019. (Novels since then are credited to Lee and brother Andrew.) Those collector's editions were limited to 100 copies, "bound in marbled boards, leather spines stamped in gold", and if you have to ask how much, you probably couldn't afford 'em. But it was nice of Lee Child and his publisher (Otto Penzler of Mysterious Press) to make the intros available.
Whether you find the introductions interesting … depends on what you might find interesting. I found Child's description of the writing process, his inspirations, his brushes with show biz, to be pretty good. Details on where he was living, his book tours? Not so much.
I was a Reacher latecomer, only starting the series with #1, Killing Floor, in 2009. But I quickly caught up, reading only one title out of order, a paperback of A Wanted Man bought in the Kansas City International Airport, because I'm phobic about getting caught on a plane without anything to read. I also report on the books I read (like this one, duh) at my blog and at Goodreads; I found it useful to review my reports in parallel with Child's intros.
Child does not, unfortunately, deal with Reacher's near-settling down with Jodie Garber in the early books. I've always been curious about her getting put in the series' memory hole! No insights on that here. Maybe in one of the future books?