Echo Burning (Jack Reacher, No. 5)
Echo Burning (Jack Reacher, No. 5) book cover

Echo Burning (Jack Reacher, No. 5)

Hardcover – June 25, 2001

Price
$26.98
Format
Hardcover
Pages
384
Publisher
Putnam Adult
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0399147265
Dimensions
6.28 x 1.3 x 9.32 inches
Weight
1 pounds

Description

Jack Reacher is Spenser before Robert Parker domesticated his Boston PI--in fact, Reacher's even tougher than Hawk. He can inhale and exhale a few times and pump up his muscles so they make a bad character think twice about tangling with him. And he's spent enough time on the right side of the law to know how to operate in the gray zone if that's what it takes to save the fair maiden, punish the bad guys, and right any other wrongs he happens to encounter in the course of his wanderings. Echo Burning is vintage Lee Child, a smartly paced, intricately plotted, and masterfully characterized thriller starring Reacher, the ex-military cop who's so concerned about commitment to anything--a woman, possessions, a permanent address--that he only owns the clothes on his back. But he's the kind of justice-seeking guy you'd want on your side, especially if you were an abused wife trapped in a marriage you can't get out of until, and unless, somebody bumps off your old man. Reacher's sympathetic, but he's not crazy. Nonetheless, he allows himself to be drawn into beautiful Carmen Greer's orbit, which ought to teach a guy not to hitchhike. Agreeing to protect her from the husband who's about to be released from jail and, according to Carmen, who's about to pay her back for tipping off the authorities to the tax fraud that landed him in prison, Reacher moves into the bunkhouse of the Echo, Texas, ranch that's owned by the bigoted, bitter, but powerful Greer family, which despises Carmen because she's Mexican and tolerates her only because she's Sloop Greer's wife and the mother of his child. The expected bloodshed ensues, but it's Sloop, not Carmen, who ends up with a bullet in his head. Reacher's convinced that Carmen acted in self-defense, even after other evidence comes to light that suggests there's more--and less--to her unhappy tale than even her own lawyer believes. This is the best Jack Reacher yet, smart, stylish, and convincing. If it's your first encounter with Child's work, be sure to check out his backlist-- Running Blind , Tripwire , etc. --Jane Adams From Publishers Weekly Jack Reacher, the vagabond freelance lawman who never hesitates to stick his nose into private business, takes his lively act to Texas, embroiling himself in what starts as a messy domestic dispute before turning far more ominous. The rugged former army cop comes to the aid of Carmen Greer, who picks him up on the side of the road one morning outside Lubbock, then asks him to kill her abusive husband. Sloop Greer is getting out of prison in a few days, and Carmen fears he will start beating her again. Reacher declines, but agrees to protect Carmen, hiring on as a cowhand at the couple's remote ranch in Echo County, Tex., far outside Pecos. Within hours of Sloop's return from prison, where he was serving time for tax evasion, violence strikes. But the victim isn't Carmen; it's Sloop. He's found shot dead, and Carmen is arrested. End of story? Hardly. Most wandering heroes would move on at this point, but not Reacher. He begins taking a hard look at both Carmen and Sloop's past, as well as local history. What he finds ugly secrets, human suffering, political evil is repulsive to a man who's been around as many blocks as Reacher. Child (Running Blind; Tripwire) has developed a fine franchise with Reacher, who comes from the Robin Hood mold, but has enough personal quirks and moments of unusual insight to separate him from the pack. Set in a literally and figuratively smoldering landscape, this is a clean, infectious story that taps deeply into two troubling human emotions the psychology of abuse and the desire for retribution. Author tour. (July)Forecast: Reacher's fifth adventure a BOMC, Literary Guild, Mystery Guild and Doubleday Book Club selection is among his strongest, and should hook even those who haven't read the other novels in the series. Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc. From Library Journal Child's Jack Reacher series just keeps on getting better. This fifth adventure (after Running Blind) finds the ex-military cop in the parched desert of west Texas. While hitchhiking, he is picked up by a beautiful woman named Carmen Greer, an act that plunges him into a maelstrom of deceit, cruelty, and murder. Sloop, Carmen's abusive husband, is due to be released from prison, and she tries to persuade Reacher to kill him. He refuses but is concerned enough about her well-being to hire out as a ranch hand at the Greers' remote ranch, where he finds a strange, bigoted family hostile to Carmen and her young daughter. Within days of his return, Sloop is shot dead and Carmen arrested. To defend her, Reacher hires a newly minted lawyer, who, is female, gay, and vegetarian. Together they unravel the mystery, leading to an explosive, nail-biting climax during a chase through a thunderstorm. Highly recommended. [A BOMC, Literary Guild, Mystery Guild, and Doubleday Book Club selection.] Fred Gervat, Concordia Coll. Lib., Bronxville, N. - Fred Gervat, Concordia Coll. Lib., Bronxville, NY Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc. From Booklist Carmen Greer wants out of a bad marriage, but it's going to be tricky. Her abusive husband, Sloop, is in prison on an IRS beef; he's due out soon, and he knows it was Carmen who turned him in to the feds. Faced with losing her daughter to Sloop and his full-pockets Texas family, Carmen takes to auditioning hitchhikers for the job of killing her husband. She winds up with ex-military cop Jack Reacher. He won't kill Sloop, but he does take a job as a ranch hand on the Greers' spread in hopes of protecting Carmen. He never gets a chance. Soon after Sloop returns, he's murdered in his bedroom with Carmen's gun. She refuses to defend herself, even though Reacher is certain she's innocent. This fifth Reacher novel is brilliantly plotted, and Reacher himself seems to get more deadly as he slips steadily down the economic ladder, ever further removed from the veneer of normalcy that military life provided. Reacher is a one-man wrecking crew nourished only by the hunt. For anyone who thinks the hard-boiled genre is growing soft around the edges. Wes Lukowsky Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved Echo Burning is the best mystery I have read this year; best written, best plotted, best in just about every way. -- Boston Globe , June24, 2001 This fifth Reacher novel is brilliantly plotted. -- Booklist , May 1, 2001 [ Echo Burning is] Child's breakthrough book into the mega-sellers. He is that good. -- Daily Mail of London Echo Burning is Lee Child's fifth novel. Killing Floor , his debut, won two awards for Best First Mystery and was nominated for two more. Child is a native of England and a former television writer. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • While hitchhiking through West Texas, former MP Jack Reacher encounters a young woman seeking protection for herself and her little girl from her monstrous husband, due to be released from jail, and his horrible family, but Reacher soon finds himself over his head among the simmering secrets of Echo, Texas. 60,000 first printing. BOMC, Lit Guild, Mystery Guild, & Doubleday.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(12.2K)
★★★★
25%
(10.2K)
★★★
15%
(6.1K)
★★
7%
(2.8K)
23%
(9.3K)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Went a little too far

Lee Child is a wonderful writer, but frequently he tries too hard to create the "perfect character" or the "perfect twist" to his plots. "ECHO BURNING" is a good example of a book that over-reaches itself. The characters are too heavily drawn, the plot is convoluted, and the details just don't quite ring true. Jack Reacher is a good, solid character, but he can't possibly be the "super-hero" that he is written as. Lee Child's grasp of the military as a way of life and as a career leaves something to be desired. There are gaps and false notes from time to time. The plot is way too far-fetched to be believable but it does hold the reader's interest.
Child's treatment of the story and the characters in "ECHO BURNING" makes for a good read and I can honestly say that I enjoyed this book and will defitely read the next one.
15 people found this helpful
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very disappointed

i had looked forward to the new novel by lee child as i have en joyed the jack reacher books so much.. to say i was disappointed is an understatement. i found the plot preposterous, the characters stereotypes and the writing far below his normal standard. i hope that this is an aberration... as jack reacher had become such a favorite of mine
13 people found this helpful
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Is it just me?

I love the Lee Child books but Echo Burning was a disappointment. Jack Reacher is an outstanding character but this book throws him in the most boring place on earth! He spends all his time on this farm in the middle of Texas trying to find out if this girl's story is true. Despite the fact that he's a modern day Robin Hood, she jerks him around so much that by the time you find out you really don't care what her problem is. Meanwhile these totally shallow assasins are roaming around and you know somehow they'll end up in Jack Reacher's way and...well the rest is obvious. The weakness of this book is character development, a real let down. If you like the Jack Reacher character, get the book. Just don't buy into the amazing reviews about it.
10 people found this helpful
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Good read!

I've read all of Lee Child's books now and Echo Burning was quite a book! For me, it started slowly and I had to really believe that something good was coming down the pike. While Carmen and Reacher were driving along in the car was very boring to me but as I stayed with it. Then when Reacher was taken into a bar by the ranch hands I began to sit up straight and pay attention. Reacher is over the top and such fun to read! The fight in the desert is wild. The description of the Texas heat is right on and you get thirsty just reading about it. Toward the end, it dragged on and out a bit but I certainly will read the next book about Jack Reacher as soon as it comes out. Worth my time!
6 people found this helpful
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MR. CHILD'S BEST BOOK SINCE

Last year, when I read RUNNING BLIND, I gave it a somewhat scathing review, stating that Lee Child hadn't produce a really exciting book since THE KILLING FLOOR, promising myself that I'll never buy another "Jack Reacher" novel in hardback for as long as I lived. As far as I was concerned, Mr. Child had three strikes against him and had struck out with me as a fan. Well, I broke the promise to myself with the publication of ECHO BURNING, and I'm glad I did. This novel turned out to be a winner in every sense of the word and represents the sheer craftsmanship that Lee Child is capable of bringing to his work. In his newest book, Jack Reacher once again returns and finds himself caught up in a game of lies, abuse and murder. While hitchhiking out of Lubbock, Texas in an attempt to escape the wrath of the law, he's picked up by Carmen Greer, a beautiful, married Latino woman who's driving a luxurious white Cadillac. Mrs. Greer is looking for someone to kill her abusive husband, Sloop, who's due to get out of prison, and she thinks that Reacher would be the perfect person to take care of her little problem. Since Reacher doesn't consider himself to be a cold-blooded killer, he politely refuses her kind offer. He does, however, agree to go back to the ranch where she and her daughter, Ellie, live with Sloop's family and to act as a protector for her. This leads to our hero finding himself in the middle of a really large domestic dispute. Except for Carmen and Ellie, nobody in the Greer family likes having his presence at the ranch, and they attempt to do everything within their power to force him to leave. When Sloop get out of jail and returns home, only to be murdered on the night of his arrival, it looks as though Carmen decided to take matters into her own hands. No one believes that she is innocent, except for Reacher, and he's not absolutely sure himself. As he attempts to find out who the real killer is, Reacher suddenly becomes the focus point of a three-person "hit" team, and he must find a way to stay alive long enough to finally get to the truth. ECHO BURNING is a taut, suspenseful thriller that displays the brilliant writing that Lee Child is capable of penning. He captures the heat and isolation of the Texas landscape perfectly, while giving us characters filled with either an outright meanness or a hidden evil. Though Reacher is able to read people, judging how good or bad they might be, he may have just met his match with the Greer family. There are so many lies and half-truths being told by, and about, the family that our main character won't know whom to believe, and neither will the reader. Is everything that Carmen Greer told Reacher a lie so that her husband could be murdered, or is the Greer family really a nest of vipers, ready to kill to protect its own? In this novel, Mr. Child touches the inner core of what evil really is and how it hides behind the masks of ordinary people. Jack Reacher, however, shines at his best as he decides to take on a whole town, if necessary, to do what he feels is right, meeting violence with violence, and handing out death to those who want a piece of him. ECHO BURNING is one tough novel that gives us a deeper look at the character of Jack Reacher and the essence of humanity in him that reaches out to help those who are being preyed upon. This is definitely the kind of person you want covering your back when the bad guys are closing in. For those of you who loved THE KILLING FLOOR, Mr. Child has written another book that equals, if not surpasses, the quality of his first novel. It's one I'm proud to highly recommend!
6 people found this helpful
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Predictible again

When I read Running Blind, i was rather dissapointed, and expected to be knocked off my feet with the follow up. I was wrong. Child has put forth another dissapointing novel. Just like Running Blind, It is very easy to figure out the solution long before the end of the story. It is better than Running Blind, in that it has some of the characteristics of a great Jack Reacher novel, such as a great fight in the desert, but the conclusion of the book just doesnt leave you guessing. If you havent read Lee Child yet, then this may be a good first book for you to read, and then you could go back to the first three and be amazed. I dont suggest it to anyone that has read him before, because it is very predictible.
Hopefully, Child can come up with something better that leaves readers guessing. Also, i wouldnt mind another book written in Reachers point of view, as Killing Floor was, which made it, in my opinion, the best of all Jack Reacher novels.
5 people found this helpful
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A DYNAMITE NOVEL

Jack Reacher is hitching, in the extreme heat of West Texas, when he is picked up by Carmen Greer. At first sight, Carmen is a good-looking woman, with the kind heart to pick up a strange man, but as the car ride begins, Reacher learns his being picked up was no accident.
Carmen has "chosen" Reacher to help her with her problem. Carmen is married to Sloop Greer, a vicous man, serving a prison sentence for a crime Carmen helped put him away for. With only a few days left before Sloop is released, and under the constant watch of Sloop's family, Carmen is desperate for help, and her only solution is to murder her husband, if Reacher will help her.
Reacher, not sure what to think of this woman, and her crazy plan, decides to see what Carmen's bitter in-laws are all about. Pretending to be a blacksmith, Reacher joins the Greer clan, to get a better look at what lurks in the Greer house, only to learn Carmen is telling the truth about the murderous family, and the one person at most risk is her young daughter.
The deeper Reacher becomes involved, he discovers the crimes and secrets buried in the Greer family's past, and trying to get Carmen and her daughter out may cost all of them their lives.
'Echo Burning' is an action packed page-turner with a plot that twists and turns, and keeps readers guessing right up until the end. As always, with a Reacher novel, the reader is kept wondering what is going on and what will happen next, and then in it's explosive climax everything comes together, leaving us breathless.
Lee Child has created a surprising thriller that readers of the series will love, and keep them anxiously awaiting the next novel in the series.
All of the Jack Reacher novels have been bestsellers, and 'Echo Burning' will also jump onto the lists, as it deserves to, for it is about the best in the series.
Nick Gonnella
5 people found this helpful
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My first Jack Reacher adventure.

I certainly like the writing style of Lee Child, and even most of the plot, but something about this story falls flat. I haven't read the series, and maybe that is why I found the character of Jack Reacher just too omnipotent and unbelievable. Jack Reacher came across to me as highly unlikable, arrogant, full of himself, and without any depth of human emotion. It's my idea that if you are going to create a character like that, just use a robot, it will make the story more understandable. But the descriptions of Texas were brilliant, they made me thirsty! And the tangled webs weaved were intriguing enough to get me to finish the story. With a little more heart, this story could make a five star tale.
4 people found this helpful
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Reacher Reaches New Levels of Excellence

As the author of a mystery series set against a multicultural backdrop, I found Lee Child's new Jack Reacher novel, ECHO BURNING, fascinating. It takes place primarily in Echo, Texas. Reacher, Child's tough yet honorable protagonist, is aiming to protect Carmen Greer, a Hispanic woman, from her husband. The husband has served time in prison, and he blames his wife for the conviction. Carmen fears her husband plans to pay her back for what has happened. In this thriller, Child addresses the issues of discrimination and domestic abuse while telling a fast-paced story. ECHO BURNING is a terrific book, perhaps Lee Child's best yet.
3 people found this helpful
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HOT TIME IN THE OLD TOWN TONIGHT

This fifth entry in the Jack Reacher series is my favorite so far. And amazingly enough, the reason is just what some of our fellow customers found irritating: it moves a little slower, and Jack seems a little more human (that's almost hard to imagine sometimes) in his previous books.
Jack is a superhero, let's face it---isn't that what we want? I mean, here's this big guy, who can pretty much take on the world single-handed, but this time, he doesn't have many physical brawls at all. His showdown with the assassins actually makes him seem a little more vulnerable this time.
Jack meets up with this mysterious woman, Carmen Greer, who tells him this tale of spouse abuse by a husband who will soon be getting out of prison. Is her tale true? Jack believes her, and there are points in the book, where you might think, "Jack, what a fool you are!"
Jack takes on a job at the Greer ranch to kind of watch out for Miss Carmen, who is hated by the family because she's Hispanic, and obviously unworthy of their sterling son. Jack's attempts to pass himself off as a wrangler are pretty funny, and his assistance from little Ellie is fun to read.
The character of Alice is a refreshing change of pace for Reacher; she's a lesbian, so there's no nooky for Reacher this time. This is probably the first book where Jack doesn't hop in the sack with somebody. Refreshingly different, for a change.
The identity of the true culprit is telegraphed early, and the biggest clue comes froma FedEx package, and Carmen's use of a strange word for a more familiar one. It's fun, though, and I enjoyed this book.
Jack is definitely a loner, and I've adjusted to the fact that the man will never make a long-term commitment, but if he did, there wouldn't be any more books!
Child is a great writer in capturing the tempestous heat and emotions of this Texas town, too.
Jack is back and better than ever!
3 people found this helpful