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Gone TomorrowA Reacher Novel

Lee Child

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Summary

Gone Tomorrow

By: Lee Child

Narrarated by: Dick Hill

New York City. Two in the morning. A subway car heading uptown. Jack Reacher, plus five other passengers. Four are okay. The fifth isn’t.

In the next few tense seconds Reacher will make a choice-and trigger an electrifying chain of events in this gritty, gripping masterwork of suspense by #1 New York Times bestseller Lee Child.

Susan Mark was the fifth passenger. She had a lonely heart, an estranged son, and a big secret. Reacher, working with a woman cop and a host of shadowy feds, wants to know just how big a hole Susan Mark was in, how many lives had already been twisted before hers, and what danger is looming around him now.

Because a race has begun through the streets of Manhattan in a maze crowded with violent, skilled soldiers on all sides of a shadow war. Susan Mark’s plain little life was critical to dozens of others in Washington, California, Afghanistan . . . from a former Delta Force operator now running for the U.S. Senate, to a beautiful young woman with a fantastic story to tell-and to a host of others who have just one thing in common: They’re all lying to Reacher. A little. A lot. Or maybe just enough to get him killed.

In a novel that slams through one hairpin surprise after another, Lee Child unleashes a thriller that spans three decades and gnaws at the heart of America . . . and for Jack Reacher, a man who trusts no one and likes it that way, it’s a mystery with only one answer-the kind that comes when you finally get face-to-face and look your worst enemy in the eye.

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New York Times Best Seller

Total File Size: 178 MB (5 files) Total Length: 6 Hours, 29 Minutes

eMusic Review 0

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Duncan Berliner

eMusic Contributor

05.19.09
Lee Child, Gone Tomorrow
2009 | Label: Random House Audio

Another brilliant potboiler featuring the most thoughtful protagonist in thrillerdom
It takes serious talent to create a finely tuned potboiler, and even seriously skilled authors can get sloppy after trotting out the same protagonist for a dozen outings. Which is why Lee Child’s well-crafted Gone Tomorrow is a kind of minor miracle. The 13th novel in Child’s Jack Reacher series impresses with its elegant misdirection, cleanly drawn characters and unremarkable but expertly-deployed prose.

The story begins when Child’s stalwart hero intervenes in an apparent suicide bombing on the New York subway. (Having a run-in with Jack Reacher is as unwise as befriending Angela Lansbury on Murder, She Wrote, it seems.) From there he entangles himself in an impressively orchestrated plot, the scope of which keeps surprising, even at the halfway point. Reacher is thoughtful to the point of comedy; the book is written in the first person, and Reacher never makes a decision without describing how he thinks each option might turn out. It’s possible that, on the page, this comes across as somewhat dry — it’s a cinch to imagine how the abridged edition ended up being less than half as long as the unabridged — but Dick Hill’s narration is pitch-perfect, turning even the simplest declaration into an interesting character moment or avuncular punchline.

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