Persuader (novel)

Persuader (date) is the seventh book in the Jack Reacher series written by Lee Child.[1] It is written in the first person.

Persuader
2003 Hardcover edition
AuthorLee Child
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
SeriesJack Reacher
GenreThriller novel
PublisherBantam Press (UK), Delacorte Press (US)
Publication date
13 May 2003
Media typePrint (Hardcover, Paperback)
Pages480 pp
ISBN0-385-33666-7
OCLC50694787
813/.54 21
LC ClassPS3553.H4838 P4 2003
Preceded byWithout Fail 
Followed byThe Enemy 

Plot

Jack Reacher is working unofficially with the DEA to bring down a boy's father, Zachary Beck, who is suspected of smuggling drugs under the pretext of trading in oriental carpets. They stage a kidnap effort on Zachary's son, Richard Beck. A frightened Richard places his trust in Reacher and asks him to take him back home. Reacher gains access to Beck and gradually gains his confidence by working as a hired gun/bodyguard. While working undercover he regrettably has to eliminate a few of Beck's minions to prevent them from exposing him. During this time he figures out that he was not the only undercover agent appointed to keep track of Zachary Beck. The house maid, too, turns out to be a federal agent trying to find evidence of arms smuggling against Zachary. The DEA, on finding that they were mistaken about the nature of the business Zachary was involved in, tries to pull Reacher out. Reacher refuses to step back as his primary motivation in getting involved at all in this off-the-books operation is to have another go at Francis Xavier Quinn, a former Military Intelligence agent who, ten years before, had brutally mutilated and murdered a female military colleague of Reacher's. Reacher had originally presumed Quinn to be dead after their last little encounter but found that assumption to be incorrect after running into Quinn in public. It's ten years later and Quinn somehow just happens to be Zachary Beck's boss in a supremely lucrative, international gun-running enterprise. And it is revealed that Zachary was forced into working for Quinn and his family was tormented by bodyguards appointed by Quinn. As always, it is Reacher's all-consuming obsession with revenge, or at least with his personal interpretation of doling out justice, which pushes him far beyond the normal boundaries of physical endurance and acceptable risk.

Critical reception

Leslie Doran of The Denver Post said that the novel had a "gripping and suspenseful opening" and that "for returning Reacher fans...beginning scenes will cause extra suspense".[2] Patrick Anderson of The Washington Post described it as "a skillful blend of sex, violence, sadism, weaponry, spies, smuggling, revenge, deception, suspense and nonstop action", though he also notes that the novel has "several premises that are hard to swallow".[3] After a short description of how quickly he read through the earlier books in the series after reading Persuader, Dale Jones of The Gazette simply stated "You might say I liked it".[4]

gollark: I don't even have screwdrivers for the weird tiny... hexagram... screws it uses.
gollark: Replacement screens are something like £20 for my phone on ebay, but I have no idea how to actually install them...
gollark: Fully manual updates which I can happily do in the background, no random bloatware, a sensible terminal...
gollark: My workloads all run on Linux, so I don't have to deal with Windows thankfully.
gollark: iOS is worse, though, in that area.

References

  1. "Jack Reacher trips another bloody two-step". Chicago Sun-Times. 25 May 2003. Retrieved 20 October 2010.
  2. Doran, Leslie (11 May 2003). "Lee Child's latest a persuasive effort". The Denver Post. Retrieved 20 October 2010.
  3. Anderson, Patrick (5 May 2003). "Meat and Potatoes". The Washington Post. Retrieved 20 October 2010.
  4. Jones, Dale (31 August 2003). "'Persuader' proves to be persuasive, full of suspense". The Gazette. Retrieved 20 October 2010.
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