Blue Moon: A Jack Reacher Novel
Blue Moon: A Jack Reacher Novel book cover

Blue Moon: A Jack Reacher Novel

Hardcover – October 29, 2019

Price
$12.09
Format
Hardcover
Pages
368
Publisher
Delacorte Press
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0399593543
Dimensions
6.31 x 1.22 x 9.31 inches
Weight
1.2 pounds

Description

An Amazon Best Book of November 2019: In Blue Moon , Lee Child turns the saying “No good deed goes unpunished” on its ear. Reacher helps an elderly man in a spot of trouble (his good deed) but when it turns out the man was on his way to make his weekly payment to a loan shark, it’s the Albanian street gang holding the ledger which ends up taking the punishment. And if Reacher has to ignite a turf war between rival gangs in order to mete out that punishment, well, why should he try to solve just one problem when he might neatly square away two? It’s not much of a spoiler to reveal such a plot point—the fact is, Reacher is Kung Fu in denim, a knight-errant with an honorable discharge who rights wrongs wherever he goes. He’s the tall, "ugly," 250-pound former military investigator who makes revenge fantasies come true in book after book. And while the body count and the blood spatter index is high in this book, even by the standards of a Reacher novel, when readers discover why the old man needed the loan, they’ll be cheering Reacher on with every page. —Vannessa Cronin, Amazon Book Review “Reacher is so irresistible a character that he draws fans from every demographic.” — Booklist (starred review) “Child is at the top of his game in this nail-biter.” —Publishers Weekly (starred review) Lee Child is the author of twenty-three New York Times bestselling Jack Reacher thrillers, with fourteen having reached the #1 position, and the #1 bestselling complete Jack Reacher story collection, No Middle Name . All his novels have been optioned for major motion pictures—including Jack Reacher (based on One Shot ) and Jack Reacher: Never Go Back . Foreign rights in the Reacher series have sold in one hundred territories. A native of England and a former television director, Lee Child lives in New York City. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. The guy with the money knew where he was going. That was clear. He didn’t glance around to get his bearings. He just stepped through the depot door and turned east and set out walking. No hesitation. But no speed either. He trudged along slow. He looked a little unsteady. His shoulders were slumped. He looked old and tired and worn out and beaten down. He had no enthusiasm. He looked like he was en route between two points of equally zero appeal. The guy with the goatee beard followed along about six paces behind, hanging back, staying slow, restraining himself. Which looked difficult. He was a rangy, long-legged individual, all hopped up with excitement and anticipation. He wanted to get right to it. But the terrain was wrong. Too flat and open. The sidewalks were wide. Up ahead was a four-way traffic light, with three cars waiting for a green. Three drivers, bored, gazing about. Maybe passengers. All potential witnesses. Better to wait. The guy with the money stopped at the curb. Waiting to cross. Aiming dead ahead. Where there were older buildings, with narrower streets between. Wider than alleys, but shaded from the sun, and hemmed in by mean three- and four-story walls either side. Better terrain. The light changed. The guy with the money trudged across the road, obediently, as if resigned. The guy with the goatee beard followed six paces behind. Reacher closed the gap on him a little. He sensed the moment coming. The kid wasn’t going to wait forever. He wasn’t going to let the perfect be the enemy of the good. Two blocks in would do it. They walked on, single file, spaced apart, oblivious. The first block felt good up ahead and side to side, but behind them it still felt open, so the guy with the beard hung back, until the guy with the money was over the cross street and into the second block. Which looked properly secretive. It was shady at both ends. There were a couple of boarded-up establishments, and a closed-down diner, and a tax preparer with dusty windows. Perfect. Decision time. Reacher guessed the kid would go for it, right there, and he guessed the launch would be prefaced by a nervous glance all around, including behind, so he stayed out of sight around the cross street’s corner, one second, two, three, which he figured was long enough for all the glances a person could need. Then he stepped out and saw the kid with the beard already closing the gap ahead, hustling, eating up the six-pace distance with a long and eager stride. Reacher didn’t like running, but on that occasion he had to. He got there too late. The guy with the beard shoved the guy with the money, who went down forward with a heavy ragged thump, hands, knees, head, and the guy with the beard swooped down in a seamless dexterous glide, into the still-moving pocket, and out again with the envelope. Which was when Reacher arrived, at a clumsy run, six feet five of bone and muscle and 250 pounds of moving mass, against a lean kid just then coming up out of a crouch. Reacher slammed into him with a twist and a dip of the shoulder, and the guy flailed through the air like a crash test dummy, and landed in a long sliding tangle of limbs, half on the sidewalk, half in the gutter. He came to rest and lay still. Reacher walked over and took the envelope from him. It wasn’t sealed. They never were. He took a look. The wad was about three quarters of an inch thick. A hundred dollar bill on the top, and a hundred dollar bill on the bottom. He flicked through. A hundred dollar bill in every other possible location, too. Thousands and thousands of dollars. Could be fifteen. Could be twenty grand. He glanced back. The old guy’s head was up. He was gazing about, panic stricken. He had a cut on his face. From the fall. Or maybe his nose was bleeding. Reacher held up the envelope. The old guy stared at it. He tried to get up, but couldn’t. Reacher walked back. xa0 He said, “Anything broken?” xa0 The guy said, “What happened?” xa0 “Can you move?” xa0 “I think so.” xa0 “OK, roll over.” xa0 “Here?” xa0 “On your back,” Reacher said. “Then we can sit you up.” xa0 “What happened?” xa0 “First I need to check you out. I might need to call the ambulance. You got a phone?” xa0 “No ambulance,” the guy said. “No doctors.” xa0 He took a breath and clamped his teeth, and squirmed and thrashed until he rolled over on his back, like a guy in bed with a nightmare. xa0 He breathed out. xa0 Reacher said, “Where does it hurt?” xa0 “Everywhere.” xa0 “Regular kind of thing, or worse?” xa0 “I guess regular.” xa0 “OK then.” xa0 Reacher got the flat of his hand under the guy’s back, high up between his shoulder blades, and he folded him forward into a sitting position, and swiveled him around, and scooted him along, until he was sitting on the curb with his feet down on the road, which would be more comfortable, Reacher thought. xa0 The guy said, “My mom always told me, don’t play in the gutter.” xa0 “Mine too,” Reacher said. “But right now we ain’t playing.” xa0 He handed over the envelope. The guy took it and squeezed it all over, fingers and thumb, as if confirming it was real. Reacher sat down next to him. The guy looked inside the envelope. xa0 “What happened?” he said again. He pointed. “Did that guy mug me?” xa0 Twenty feet to their right the kid with the goatee beard was face down and motionless. xa0 “He followed you off the bus,” Reacher said. “He saw the envelope in your pocket.”“Were you on the bus too?” Reacher nodded. He said, “I came out the depot right behind you.” The guy put the envelope back in his pocket. He said, “Thank you from the bottom of my heart. You have no idea. More than I can possibly say.” “You’re welcome,” Reacher said. “You saved my life.” “My pleasure.” “I feel like I should offer you a reward.” “Not necessary.” “I can’t anyway,” the guy said. He touched his pocket. “This is a payment I have to make. It’s very important. I need it all. I’m sorry. I apologize. I feel bad.” “Don’t,” Reacher said. Twenty feet to their right the kid with the beard pushed himself up to his hands and knees. The guy with the money said, “No police.” The kid glanced back. He was stunned and shaky, but he was already twenty feet ahead. Should he go for it? Reacher said, “Why no police?” “They ask questions when they see a lot of cash.” “Questions you don’t want to answer?” “I can’t anyway,” the guy said again. The kid with the beard took off. He staggered to his feet and set out fleeing the scene, weak and bruised and floppy and uncoordinated, but still plenty fast. Reacher let him go. He had run enough for one day. The guy with the money said, “I need to get going now.” He had scrapes on his cheek and his forehead, and blood on his upper lip, from his nose, which had taken a decent impact. “You sure you’re OK?” Reacher asked. “I better be,” the guy said. “I don’t have much time.” “Let me see you stand up.” The guy couldn’t. Either his core strength had drained away, or his knees were bad, or both. Hard to say. Reacher helped him to his feet. The guy stood in the gutter, facing the opposite side of the street, hunched and bent. He turned around, laboriously, shuffling in place. He couldn’t step up the curb. He got his foot in place, but the propulsive force necessary to boost himself up six inches was too much load for his knee to take. It must have been bruised and sore. There was a bad scuff on the fabric of his pants, right where his kneecap would be. Reacher stood behind him and cupped his hands under his elbows, and lifted, and the guy stepped up weightless, like a man on the moon. Reacher asked, “Can you walk?” The guy tried. He managed small steps, delicate and precise, but he winced and gasped, short and sharp, every time his right leg took the weight. “How far have you got to go?” Reacher asked. The guy looked all around, calibrating. Making sure where he was. “Three more blocks,” he said. “On the other side of the street.” “That’s a lot of curbs,” Reacher said. “That’s a lot of stepping up and down.” “I’ll walk it off.” “Show me,” Reacher said. The guy set out, heading east as before, at a slow shuffling creep, with his hands out a little, as if for balance. The wincing and the gasping was loud and clear. Maybe getting worse. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • #1
  • NEW YORK TIMES
  • BESTSELLER • THE BLOCKBUSTER JACK REACHER SERIES THAT INSPIRED TWO MAJOR MOTION PICTURES AND THE STREAMING SERIES
  • REACHER
  • “Jack Reacher is today’s James Bond, a thriller hero we can’t get enough of.”—Ken Follett
  • “This is a random universe,” Reacher says. “Once in a blue moon things turn out just right.” This isn’t one of those times. Reacher is on a Greyhound bus, minding his own business, with no particular place to go, and all the time in the world to get there. Then he steps off the bus to help an old man who is obviously just a victim waiting to happen. But you know what they say about good deeds. Now Reacher wants to make it right. An elderly couple have made a few well-meaning mistakes, and now they owe big money to some very bad people. One brazen move leads to another, and suddenly Reacher finds himself a wanted man in the middle of a brutal turf war between rival Ukrainian and Albanian gangs. Reacher has to stay one step ahead of the loan sharks, the thugs, and the assassins. He teams up with a fed-up waitress who knows a little more than she’s letting on, and sets out to take down the powerful and make the greedy pay. It’s a long shot. The odds are against him. But Reacher believes in a certain kind of justice . . . the kind that comes along once in a blue moon.
  • NAMED ONE OF THE BEST BOOKS OF THE YEAR BY
  • EVENING STANDARD

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(23.5K)
★★★★
25%
(19.6K)
★★★
15%
(11.8K)
★★
7%
(5.5K)
23%
(18K)

Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

Initially Comic Plot Soon Turns to Bloody Carnage

In the beginning, BLUE MOON: A JACK REACHER NOVEL is comical (like a Donald Westlake novel), as Reacher inadvertently sets off a Ukrainian/Albanian gang war by killing two Albanian quick-loan enforcers. The rival gangs’ misinformed leaders (Dino, Gregory) start knocking off each other’s men, two by two, as they try to keep the score even. But the fun soon shifts to grim bloody carnage, once the gang leaders identify Reacher as the catalyst for their losses.

In the novel, Reacher thwarts the robbery of an old man (Aaron Shevick), takes Shevick’s place in repaying an Albanian mafia loan, and then becomes personally committed to recovering money that Shevick desperately needs. Shevick’s daughter was severely wronged by the now-missing head (Trulenko) of a startup software company, who pocketed the company’s cash and let it go bankrupt. The Ukrainians are protecting Trulenko, who still has the cash.

Both the Albanian and Ukrainian capos eventually--and still mistakenly--decide that “Shevick” (actually Reacher) is a person sent in by outsiders to start a gang war and let the rivals knock each other off so that the outsiders can move in. Can Reacher stay out of the gangs’ grasp for long enough to set things right for Shevick?

The novel is an exciting page turner with a lot of drama. While it’s unlikely that Reacher’s complex tactics would have succeeded in real life, they’re totally believable in the context of the novel. The supporting characters (Abby, Hogan, Barton, Vantresca, Aaron and Maria Shevick) are likeable and interesting. Jack Reacher fans won’t be disappointed, as Reacher performs at his crusader best.
111 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Reacher in peak form, nothing better

There's a strict formula to Reacher novels: big man gets off a bus in a small town, bumps into bad men doing bad things to decent people.In this case, it's an unnamed town ruled by rival factions of Ukrainians and Albanians, and an older couple in deep to a loan shark on the Ukraine side. Reacher steps in, intending to do one small good deed, but things escalate -- as they tend to do, in Reacher's world -- and within a day, Reacher finds himself in the middle of an escalating gang war, where the two factions agree on only one thing: get rid of the big ugly guy. His only real ally: a younger, dark-haired waitress who likes to "do one thing a day that scares me " and gets involved in the action for no good reason, really, but she's fun, so why not?

After twenty-something books, Lee Child has the formula dialed in. Some outings are better than others, and this is right at the top. The action starts immediately and does not let up. I had to put the book down periodically just to settle my nerves; Reacher does not get that chance himself. He's dealing with not one, but two, sets of bad guys, with an ugly assist from a broken health care and judicial system that put the old folks in this situation in the first place. There's also a welcome steady pulse of humor in the book, as when the waitress notes to Reacher as he prepares to go after two men in a car, "They both have guns," to which he responds, "For now. In a minute I will have them."

As usual, it becomes impossible to see how Reacher is ever going to solve these problems; and as usual, he does, in ways that are both blunt force and crafty.

Sometimes I do wish that Reacher would evolve a bit; I was sad, a few books ago, when Lee Child raised the possibility of Reacher having a daughter; it would be good to see his universe expand a bit, to expand the stakes of his life. But as long as he's living like a modern day Shane, riding into town, kicking butt, and riding out again, I'll admit: no one does it better.
90 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

A Little Too Perfect

I admire Lee Child for creating and perfecting the great legend of Jack Reacher and the successful formula he uses with great success -- but both are now perhaps too perfect. Jack is the perfect physical specimen with perfect experience, perfect instincts, perfect reactions, perfect logic, perfect understanding of human behavior, and now even perfect companions for this particular plot. Just how perfect is it that Jack meets two ex-military characters in a medium sized town who have the perfect complimentary skills and logic to help Jack achieve the desired perfect results in this perfectly difficult endeavor? Yes, I know -- too many "perfects". That of course is my point.

Mr. Child's writing is (as always) smooth and taut, his characters well fleshed out, and his main plot successfully enhanced and integrated with several sub-plots. This was a very complicated story to create and it is executed perfectly. There's that word again. In this case it is used as the ultimate writer's complement. This is probably the most complicated story that Lee Child has ever written and he has done a masterful job with it. I have read and own every episode in the Jack Reacher series and this is by far his most intricate work.

But let's get back to Jack's constant exhibition of perfection. In addition to the attributes listed previously, they also include his perfect understanding and use of physics, his perfect calculation of the odds he faces with each decision, his perfect ability to time and target both his offensive and defensive strikes, and his innate ability to get inside other peoples' heads. Then there is also his perfect understanding of strategy and warfare, his ability to realize how much is "too much", his ability to calculate numbers in his head, and when it is safer to retreat and regroup to fight another day.

In addition, some of his companions are now able to think like he does and perfectly understand why his strategies make so much sense. His new female companion even perfectly parrots some of Jack's terse phrases, thinking and speaking like him perfectly. So I have to ask "how much perfection is too much?" Over the years Jack has evolved from everyman's hero to a computerized superman. I prefer the folksy and (mostly) gentle giant who acts as judge and jury -- not the vengeful angel who asks his partners "thumbs up or thumbs down" on whether he should kill each criminal he has in his grasp.

The only clue that I saw that indicates that Jack may be coming to his end is when an old lady asks him "do you have any children?" Jack's response was "not that I know of". Is this a subtle signal that Jack will be confronted by someone from his past? Someone related to Jack who will eventually assume his very heavy mantle? Perhaps it is time for a transition.
82 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Not My Reacher!

I totally agree with many of the other reviews by Reacher fans ( I still am but think I'll stick with my old ones). This was a bloodbath! So unlike the Jack Reacher I like who goes (went?) out of his way to avoid killing. And the standard woman character was totally neutral about all of this. And I could never picture the town in my mind..all the grimy streets they endlessly walked down. I also agree the health insurance plot was totally unrealistic. Sorry Lee..do better next time (and I won't pre-order!)
52 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Hugely Disappointing

After years of reading every Reacher title from the get-go, it seems that the series has hit a wall. This is a flabby effort that might have been trying for humor, but fails. There's no narrative tension, no tension at all. Once Reacher gets involved in this tale of an elderly couple caught in the nasty fallout of borrowing from a money launderer, we can almost hear the approaching hoofbeats of the mighty man's stallion bringing him to the rescue.
In short order, predictably, lots of bad guys get dead. All the good guys are really good and the bad guys are really bad. There's a nice woman who understands that Reacher must move along. And that's it, folks. Very disappointing.
29 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

"Disappointed" is too mild to describe my reaction

I have something good to say about Blue Moon: It did not take an hour to realize that this is not a true Reacher story so, I gave up reading it after 60+ pages! It has been my pleasure to read and enjoy more than 20 Lee Child novels, over several years. While Reacher #25 is not worth opening, I am more saddened by Lee Child. WHY, did you treat your fans (and now former fans) in this manner, Lee? Yes, I have reason to believe that you read these reviews.{You told me so years ago}. Why did you damage your reputation by allowing this utter baloney to be sold in your name? Yes, I say "...in your name" because I do not believe that you are capable of writing such a pitiful piece of rubbish. Have you joined with two other big-name novelists and allowed someone to use your name for drivel? Had the manuscript not had your name, there is not a publisher of significance who would have printed Blue Moon! So sad to lose one’s well-earned reputation; seemingly, for another payday. How could a cheque be that important to James Dover Grant (k/a Lee Child), I wonder? As do the people back in Sheffield.
Time to expand my authors. In the past five years, the very best died (Vince Flynn, who never insulted his fans) and three have shown what they really think of their readers!
28 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Will the real Lee Child please stand up? Or better, the real Jack Reacher!

What a dysfunctional hodgepodge of disjointed story telling?
I liked the gamine waitress as much as Reacher in this seemingly rushed-from the start disappointment.
I’ll have patience and hope but the signs aren’t positive. Has Child finally hit the wall?
Hey, it happens to the best but we loyalists don’t have to like it! Or buy more than two bad reads. Time is too precious!
Get the next one right, Mr Child!
23 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Record High Body Count

356 pages. 51 Chapters. Jack Reacher is coming into a large city on a Greyhound bus. A no name city. People get off the bus. Something does not look right. A punk is following an elderly man. Reacher gets off the bus and follows them. Reacher prevents the man from being robbed. The elderly man is hurt and Reacher walks him to his nearby home, where he lives with his wife.

Reacher soon learns that the man and his wife are in trouble. They have borrowed money, from a moneylender, for their older daughter’s hospital bill and now they have to pay it back. This unknown city is controlled between rival Ukrainian and Albanian gangs, including money lending. Reacher decides to stay and help this couple and soon he has created a war between the two groups, and Reacher is in the middle.

Author Lee Child’s recently released “Blue Moon” is the 25th novel in the Jack Reacher series. This reader has enjoyed them all and typically finds them believable. While there are some eastern European gangs operating in the United States, it is not realistic that they would control a city the size of this no name city. Where are the police? Where is the FBI? Still, there is no shortage of Reacher type excitement and even an attractive woman is involved in the story, although this reader had a difficult time visualizing her.

There typically is a body count in a Lee Child novel. In this one, Jack Reacher has probably set a record. Realistic ending? Probably not, but then again this is a novel that one reads for enjoyment.

This coming March 14 & 15 is the Tucson Festival of Books, on the campus of the University of Arizona. It is the top book event in Arizona. Two days of author talks and signings. It would be wonderful if author Child would make a presence! The auditorium would be packed!
20 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

I'm done with Reacher

I've read every one of Lee Child's Jack Reacher books and I used to look forward to each new title. But "Blue Moon" has convinced me that Child has run out of gas. It's as if he hired some focus group who told him, "We love the parts where Reacher beats people up," so he's inserted three or four more episodes of gratuitous violence, just for the hell of it. He's also made Reacher callous and mean, killing people he doesn't need to kill. Worst of all, the writing has definitely gone downhill. Cliche after cliche. Repetitive phases that satisfy some word-count quota but add nothing to the narrative. At this point, I'm afraid that Lee Child is just cashing in on the Reacher franchise, which is a shame. Jack Reacher was an interesting character. But I'm done with him now.
17 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Arguably the most action packed Reacher novel yet

Jack Reacher has a Jessica Fletcher-like knack for being around when trouble occurs (though his responses certainly differ from those of Ms. Fletcher). In Blue Moon, our hero comes to the rescue of an elderly man who is carrying a large envelope of cash on a Greyhound bus. After saving the man from an attempted mugging, Reacher joins the man and his wife for lunch, and learns that they are in deep with loan sharks. Although Reacher intends to not get involved and continue on his travels, he quickly becomes a person of interest to rival gangs warring for control of their city.

After 20+ books and numerous short stories it could be said that the Reacher stories are formulaic. That may be true, but I don't care because Lee Child's narratives are consistently so engaging. Blue Moon is a page-turning adrenaline rush from start to finish. There is more gunfire than the previous books. Personally I prefer the street brawls to the shootouts, but there are a few of those too.

If Jack Reacher were a real person he would be a national treasure. Cheers to Mr. Child for maintaining such a high standard of quality for the Reacher series after so many years. Can't wait for the next one!
15 people found this helpful