Jack Reacher is an unlikely hero. As he describes himself,
he’s a “No-account, unemployed and homeless veteran. . . with no stable
relationships.” He hitchhikes across the country and, even in this day and age,
still manages to get rides. But the rides always end badly, with Reacher having
to shoot bad guys and foil crime in whatever locale he finds himself.
In A Wanted Man,
Reacher is still—as in Child’s most recent books—trying to get himself to Virginia. He’s fallen
for a woman he’s spoken to on the phone, and wants to meet her in person to see
if there’s the chance of romance. But, as always, his plans are detoured when
his ride doesn’t quite work out. This time, he’s picked up by two guys and a
woman, and the woman tries to signal to Reacher that something is amiss. The
reader knows that earlier that evening, three guys had walked into a bunker but
only two walked out. But where the woman came from, who the dead guy was, and
why the FBI, CIA, and State Department are all involved in what looks to be a local
crime is the crux of the story.
I really like Reacher, though I’ve read so many of Child’s
mysteries that his character’s idiosyncrasies make me roll my eyes. For one
thing, Reacher only owns the clothes on his back, since he has no luggage. So
when they get dirty (three days on a shirt) he merely buys more. He budgets
between $20-$25 a day, which he feels is “cheaper than living somewhere, and
easier than washing and ironing and folding and packing. That was for damn sure.” But where does he
get his money? And if he carries it with him (he doesn’t seem like a credit
card kind of a guy), how does he not get rolled by the occasional bad guy who
picks him up?
Oh—I forgot. He’s Jack Reacher. Who would dare?
He also has an internal clock that should be in a museum. My
mother has pointed out that he always knows what time it is, despite not
wearing a wristwatch. In this book, he sets “the clock in his head for two
hours” to force himself to wake up though he hasn’t slept for at least 24
hours.
But the little tic that I like the most is Reacher’s
emphatic, “That was for damn sure” whenever he mentally agrees with
himself. (I included one of these lines
in the quote in the third paragraph.) I once heard Lee Child speak at a book
festival, and someone pointed out that he writes that line in his books
frequently. The fan asked Child if he uses it so often because he uses it
himself. As I recall (I wasn’t taking notes, and this was several years ago),
Child said that it was more of a writer’s device to transition between scenes
or action. I had never noticed the line prior to hearing the question, but once
it was pointed out, I notice it whenever I read one of his books.
Lee Child’s Jack Reacher stories are improbable, similar,
and totally enjoyable. That’s for damn sure.