Jack Reacher, the ex-Army MP protagonist in Lee Child's long-running series, knows what duty means. He understands a soldier's duty to his country, but he also knows that duty runs two ways. One's country---and its leaders, politicians, and citizens---has a duty to its soldier. More often than not, Reacher believes, that duty is forgotten, and when that happens---when a soldier feels that he has nothing to gain from serving a corrupt country with a corrupt ideology---he starts to feel that he has nothing to lose, as well.
"Nothing To Lose", the twelfth novel in the Reacher series, is Child's most blatant commentary on the Bush-era Iraq War, but it never comes across as too preachy or, in any way, an outright castigation of the Bush Administration. Child knows that the secret to good writing is the age-old axiom "show, don't tell." He knows that he doesn't have to tell the reader how ugly or pointless the war is, or how mistreated our soldiers are by our own government. Like any good writer, Child makes his point by simply creating a good story. The "message" within the story never becomes the focus, and it never gets in the way of the story.
In "Nothing To Lose", we find Reacher hitch-hiking through Colorado, and he literally finds himself walking the line between Hope and Despair. Hope, Colorado and Despair, Colorado are two small neighboring suburban cities, but, as their names imply, they are as different as night and day. In the town of Despair, a weary Reacher walks into a diner and is denied a cup of coffee. Minutes later, the sheriff and several deputies arrive to kick him out of town for "vagrancy". They drop him off at the Hope city limits, where the Hope police chief, a woman named Vaughn, is waiting to pick him up. Unlike the Despair cops, she's friendly enough. She drops him off at the diner in Hope and tells him an interesting story.
Despair, she tells him, is a company town. It's a huge steel recycling plant---the largest in the country, actually---that employs over half the town, while the other half works for the smaller businesses that are kept afloat by the factory workers. The plant and the town is owned by the richest man in the region, a man named Thurman. He's also the town's fire-and-brimstone preacher at the End Times Church, the only church in town. The people in Despair don't like strangers.
She tells Reacher to leave it alone, but Reacher doesn't like being kicked out of towns for no good reasons. He also likes a good mystery. Like: why do so many of the people in Despair look physically ill? Why is there an Army installation attached to the factory? And why does a a plane take off and arrive hours later every night from Thurman's hangar? Where is it going and what is it carrying? When he decides to cross the city limits back into Despair to find out, he literally stumbles over a body. Now, Reacher has a real murder mystery to solve. And a townful of secrets to uncover.
"Nothing to Lose" is Child's most engrossing and suspenseful thriller yet. It unfolds slowly, but it never unfolds in ways one would expect. It is also thought-provoking and moving in parts, as Child shows the reader the ugly aftermath of war and the all-too-human human costs of war.